Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday that he will move forward the ratification of Sweden’s Nato bid to the country’s parliament when it reopens in the autumn, adding that he expects Stockholm to take some steps against terrorism in return for the approval.
Ankara has held out on the ratification for months, accusing Sweden of doing too little against people Turkey sees as terrorists, mainly Kurdish members of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).
But in an unexpected turn on Monday, Erdogan agreed to forward Sweden’s Nato accession bid to parliament.
Speaking at a news conference after the Nato summit in Vilnius, Erdogan said Sweden will provide a roadmap to Turkey regarding the steps it will take before the ratification is sent to parliament.
Turkey’s parliament closes at the end of the week and will reconvene in October.
“When it reopens, I believe our parliament speaker will bring this forward among international agreements. The primary place of approval is the parliament, then it will come to me for approval. We want this process to end as soon as possible” Erdogan said.
Sweden and Finland applied for Nato membership last year in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, abandoning policies of military non-alignment that had lasted through the decades of the Cold War.
Erdogan said he expects Sweden to take concrete steps against terrorism as per their agreement, adding that Stockholm will also support updating Turkey’s customs agreement with the European Union as well as visa-free travel.
Turkey expects an EU reform group to be revived after Ankara approves Sweden’s Nato membership as Turkey seeks to enter a new period of improved ties with the West, a senior Turkish official told Reuters on Tuesday.
Separately, a senior official told Reuters on Wednesday that Erdogan’s government will hold talks with its nationalist parliamentary ally on ratifying Sweden’s accession, after the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) appeared to take a negative view on the issue.
MHP leader Devlet Bahceli said on Tuesday that Sweden had failed to distance itself from terrorism, but added that Erdogan would make the final call about Sweden’s membership bid.
Erdogan’s AK Party relies on the MHP for a parliamentary majority, which is required to push through the ratification. Other parties in parliament have not said whether they would support the move.
“There will be contacts with the MHP either by the president or by high levels of the government,” the official said.
“Bahceli’s comments are not fully compatible with the steps that have been taken so far. The behind-the-scenes developments and the reasoning for the decision that was taken will be relayed to Bahceli and other MHP executives,” the person said.
Ankara also expects the lifting of some “implicit” economic restrictions, including embargoes and restrictions of arms trade, by Sweden as well as other EU and Nato countries, the official said.
A statement issued by Turkey and Sweden on Monday said Sweden had reiterated that it would not provide support to the Kurdish groups and would actively support efforts to reinvigorate Turkey’s EU accession process.
The PKK is considered a terrorist organisation by Turkey, the EU and the United States.