Current:Home > reviewsBiden lauds NATO deal to welcome Sweden, but he may get an earful from Zelenskyy about Ukraine's blocked bid -FinanceAcademy
Biden lauds NATO deal to welcome Sweden, but he may get an earful from Zelenskyy about Ukraine's blocked bid
View
Date:2025-04-15 03:04:33
Vilnius, Lithuania — President Biden was in Lithuania Tuesday for crucial meetings with America's NATO allies. The leaders have a lot to discuss at their two-day summit, but the focus will be almost entirely on Russia and the threat it poses to eastern Europe as Vladimir Putin continues his war against Ukraine.
The leaders managed to kick off their summit with a win even before it officially started. An agreement was announced Monday that has seen the government of current NATO member Turkey drop its opposition to Sweden joining the alliance.
Why does Sweden's NATO membership matter?
With its powerful navy, Sweden's pending accession to the transatlantic alliance is another signal to Putin, the NATO leaders say, that his unprovoked war has backfired, uniting the West against him rather than dividing his global adversaries.
Putin's invasion of Ukraine quickly sparked bids for NATO membership by two long-unaligned Nordic nations, Sweden and Finland. Finland's bid sailed through, and the country became the 31st member of the alliance in April.
Speaking Monday after his arrival for the summit, Mr. Biden said he was, "looking forward to convening very soon with 32 members, with the addition of Sweden."
The governments of all existing NATO members must now individually clear Sweden as a new member, but the deal with Turkey makes it all but certain.
This week's summit is the first meeting of NATO leaders since the Wagner mercenary group staged its brief, aborted mutiny in Russia last month.
Russia's government said Monday that Putin had met with Wagner's leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin, five days after the uprising, but the shadowing businessman long believed to be a close Putin associate has not been seen publicly since his failed putsch.
The incident has further unsettled NATO countries near Russia, including the Baltic states like Lithuania, whose president met with Mr. Biden on Tuesday.
"Our situation is unfortunately deteriorating," President Gitanas Nauseda told Mr. Biden.
Protecting NATO's eastern flank from an increasingly unstable Russia was at the top of the agenda for Tuesday's meetings, and the U.S. president vowed the alliance would "defend every inch of" its territory.
Why is Ukraine not in NATO?
As Russia's assault on Ukraine enters its 17th month, the leaders gathered in Vilnius announced a long-awaited reform "path" that Ukraine can take to someday join NATO itself.
Ukraine's government has sought membership for years, but the Biden administration and some European NATO members have been wary of initiating the accession process while Ukraine is actively engaged in a war with Russia. Under the NATO charter's common defense principle an attack on one member is treated as an attack on all, so the concern is that if Ukraine were to become a member, the U.S. and all of its NATO allies would suddenly find themselves engaged directly in the war with Russia.
In a terse statement posted on his social media channels Tuesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called his Western partners' reluctance to establish a clear timetable for Ukrainian membership "unprecedented and absurd."
He took a preemptive jab at the path to membership that emerged from the NATO summit, bemoaning the "strange wording" being discussed among the bloc's leaders and the "conditions" they're expected to impose "for inviting Ukraine."
"It seems that there is no willingness to invite Ukraine to NATO or make it a member of the Alliance," wrote Zelenskyy a day before he's expected to sit down for a meeting with Mr. Biden in Vilnius. "This means that it remains possible to bargain Ukraine's membership in NATO in negotiations with Russia. And for Russia, this means motivation to continue its terror. Uncertainty is weakness."
We value our allies. We value our shared security. And we always appreciate an open conversation.
— Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) July 11, 2023
Ukraine will be represented at the NATO summit in Vilnius. Because it is about respect.
But Ukraine also deserves respect. Now, on the way to Vilnius, we received signals that…
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg told reporters at the summit on Tuesday that language had agreed upon by the allies and Ukraine would be welcomed into the fold, "when allies agree and conditions are met."
"We reaffirmed Ukraine will become a member of NATO and agreed to remove the requirement for a membership action plan," he said, referring to a step usually required by nations wishing to joini the alliance. "This will change Ukraine's membership path from a two-step path to a one-step path," he said.
Asked in Vilnius how long he thought it would take Ukraine's government to meet the "conditions" set by NATO once the war with Russia does end, U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan said earlier that he couldn't "put a timetable on it."
"I don't believe that you will see that coming out of here," he said of this week's NATO summit. "This is about the substance of democratic and security reforms and getting those right."
The Russians have labeled even the prospect of Ukraine's future membership a "threat," and Moscow has warned ambiguously that it would draw a "reaction."
That has come as no surprise to the leaders gathered in Vilnius, as Russia used Ukraine's NATO aspirations as a rationale for its unprovoked war in the first place.
- In:
- War
- Joe Biden
- Ukraine
- Russia
- Vladimir Putin
- Volodymyr Zelenskyy
- European Union
- NATO
Nancy Cordes is CBS News' chief White House correspondent.
TwitterveryGood! (5867)
Related
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- The FDIC says First Citizens Bank will acquire Silicon Valley Bank
- What banks do when no one's watching
- A 3D-printed rocket launched successfully but failed to reach orbit
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Canada’s Tar Sands: Destruction So Vast and Deep It Challenges the Existence of Land and People
- John Fetterman’s Evolution on Climate Change, Fracking and the Environment
- Honda recalls more than 330,000 vehicles due to a side-view mirror issue
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- Chris Noth Slams Absolute Nonsense Report About Sex and the City Cast After Scandal
Ranking
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Michigan clerk stripped of election duties after he was charged with acting as fake elector in 2020 election
- Raging Flood Waters Driven by Climate Change Threaten the Trans-Alaska Pipeline
- Inside Clean Energy: Yes, We Can Electrify Almost Everything. Here’s What That Looks Like.
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Bethenny Frankel's Daughter Bryn, 13, Is All Grown Up in Rare TV Appearance
- Yes, You Can Stay at Barbie's Malibu DreamHouse Because Life in Plastic Is Fantastic
- Why Kim Kardashian Isn't Ready to Talk to Her Kids About Being Upset With Kanye West
Recommendation
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
Producer sues Fox News, alleging she's being set up for blame in $1.6 billion suit
TikTok CEO says company is 'not an agent of China or any other country'
All new cars in the EU will be zero-emission by 2035. Here's where the U.S. stands
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
The Perseids — the best meteor shower of the year — are back. Here's how to watch.
Nintendo's Wii U and 3DS stores closing means game over for digital archives
The Big D Shocker: See a New Divorcée Make a Surprise Entrance on the Dating Show