![A group of young girls dressed in the uniform of the Korean People’s Army on a Pyongyang street. Why is President Erdogan dragging his feet on NATO expansion? writes Mattie Brignal. The Turkish despot and lukewarm friend of the West has vowed to block Finland and Sweden’s NATO accession bids, saying both countries support terrorism. Sweden, according to Erdogan, is a “hatchery” for terrorist cells. NATO’s 30 members must unanimously agree that the Nordic states can join the alliance. If Erdogan is serious, it puts the kibosh on what was expected to be a smooth admission. While Erdogan’s opposition on Friday sounded more like a whinge than a genuine veto threat, his rhetoric this week has hardened. He said today that the two countries needn’t bother sending diplomatic delegations to convince him – his mind is made up. At least part of Ankara’s foot-dragging will be down to the reasons stated. Erdogan has accused Sweden and Finland of harbouring members of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which Turkey designates a terrorist group, and followers of Fethullah Gulen, who Erdogan accuses of masterminding a 2016 coup attempt. “Neither of these countries have a clear, open attitude towards terrorist organisation. How can we trust them?” he said. In 2019, both nations slapped an arms embargo on Ankara after its incursion into Syria. Turkey wants these lifted. This won’t be the whole story. Tensions with fellow NATO members - including Western support for Syrian Kurds and spats with Greece and France over Mediterranean maritime borders – suggest Erdogan is exerting leverage. Erdogan’s biggest gripe is with the Biden administration. He has admitted that his relationship with Biden hasn’t been nearly as warm as with Trump or Obama. He feels he’s been given the diplomatic cold shoulder. Turkey also wants Congress to approve its purchase of US-made F-16 fighter jets. According to Yavuz Baydar, editor-in-chief of Ahval, a Turkish online news site, Erdogan’s domestic woes help explain his actions. “Challenges for Erdogan to survive politically are piling up ahead of elections that must be held by June next year,” he says. “[He] feels growing political pressure at home due to a massive systemic crisis, topped by a steep economic decline… He needs money, and he feels he needs to straighten out his relations with the White House and - especially - Congress.” The veto threat could well be designed to send a message to the White House with the hope of gaining some concessions – or at least a phone call. Will Erdogan really follow through with his threat? Asli Aydintasbas, Senior Fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, thinks the move is a gambit. “It is unlikely that Erdogan had one specific policy goal in mind, but he will no doubt be expecting to be cajoled, persuaded, and eventually rewarded for his cooperation, as in the past,” she writes, referring to Turkey’s initial reluctance to allow Lithuania to join NATO in 2019 for similar reasons. Turkey’s NATO partners will exert their own pressure in return.](https://reaction.life/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/shutterstock_1418395676-600x375.jpg)
North Korea: army enlisted to help deal with over a million Covid cases
Kim Jong-un has criticised his own health officials for failing to deal with the emergency and lack of medical supplies in North Korea.
Kim Jong-un has criticised his own health officials for failing to deal with the emergency and lack of medical supplies in North Korea.
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