FINLAND AND SWEDEN – A LESSON IN COURAGE – TIME TO BOOT TURKEY FROM NATO

When an adversary threatens you there are two choices one can make, one is to back down, the other is to reject their demands. In Sweden and Finland we  have seen their fight. They stand tall in the face of hollow threats. But we have seen a weak knee invalid, back down when he was threatened. A quintessential FDR and Neville Chamberlain all rolled into one. Yes, our president went brown pants when bullied. Forthrightly so, he is a COWARDBuy Who Sh.. Their Pants? | Mr. Stinko Dirty Underpants | Scented with Pee & Diarrhea Stains| | Give to Your Friend, Frenemy or Enemy. It's The Long-awaited Product no one Asked

Turkey plays all three sides from his mouth. Now he is blowing the whistle; he is adamant that Finland and Sweden are about to join NATO. He claims they harbor enemies of Turkey, terrorists he calls them. We have enough of the Turkish Dog.

WORLD POLITICS

‘The stakes here are now massive’: Turkey is threatening to block NATO membership for Sweden and Finland

  • Turkey’s Erdogan has doubled down on his opposition to Sweden and Finland joining the NATO alliance, in a move some analysts say is aimed at gaining concessions.
  • NATO ascension for a new member state requires consensus approval from all existing members.
  • Turkey, which joined the alliance in 1952, is a crucial player in NATO, boasting the second-largest military in the 30-member group after the United States
  • Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has doubled down on his opposition to Sweden and Finland joining the NATO alliance, a move that would be historic for the two Nordic countries in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    “We will not say ‘yes’ to those [countries] who apply sanctions to Turkey to join security organization NATO,” Erdogan said at a news conference late Monday. He was referring to Sweden’s suspension of weapons sales to Turkey in 2019 over its military activities in Syria.

    Sweden’s Foreign Ministry said Monday that it planned to send senior officials joining with officials from Finland to the Turkish capital of Ankara to address Erdogan’s objections. But the Turkish leader essentially said they’d be wasting their time.

    “Will they come to persuade us? Excuse us, but they shouldn’t bother,” Erdogan said. He added that the two countries joining would make NATO “a place where representatives of terrorist organizations are concentrated.”

    Finland’s Foreign Ministry responded to a CNBC request for comment, saying that it “implements the UN as well as the EU terrorism sanctions against any person or entity … in accordance with EU legislation” and that “the EU and Turkey have regular dialogues on counterterrorism issues.” CNBC has also reached out to the Swedish government for comment.