ANKARA, TURKIYE -- Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said that NATO should not bet on his country approving Sweden's application to join the Western military alliance before a July summit because the Nordic nation has not fully addressed his security concerns.
Sweden and Finland applied for membership together following Russia's invasion of Ukraine last year. Finland became NATO's 31st member in April after the Turkish parliament ratified its request, but Turkiye has held off approving Sweden's bid.
NATO wants to bring Sweden into the fold by the time the leaders of member nations meet for a summit in Lithuania's capital on July 11-12. Speaking to journalists on his way back from a state visit to Azerbaijan on Tuesday, Erdogan said Turkiye's attitude to the accession was not "positive."
Turkiye's state-run Anadolu Agency and other media reported Erdogan's comments as senior officials from NATO, Sweden, Finland and Turkiye met in Ankara on Wednesday. The officials were scheduled to discuss what Finland and Sweden have done to address Turkiye's concerns over alleged terrorist organizations.
Erdogan said the Turkish delegation at the meeting "will give this message: `This is our president's opinion, don't expect anything different at Vilnius,"' Lithuania's capital.
Turkiye's government accuses Sweden of being too lenient toward groups that Ankara says pose a security threat, including militant Kurdish groups and people associated with a 2016 coup attempt.
A series of separate demonstrations in Stockholm, including a protest by an anti-Islam activist who burned the Quran outside the Turkish Embassy, also angered Turkish officials.
Speaking in Sweden's parliament, Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson called the Ankara meeting "very important." Kristersson reiterated that his government had done what it promised in an agreement last year that was intended to secure Turkiye's ratification of the country's NATO membership.
However, Erdogan remained unsatisfied. He said he told NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg last week, "If you expect us to respond to Sweden's expectations, first of all, Sweden must destroy what this terrorist organization has done." He was referring to the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, a group that has waged a separatist insurgency in Turkiye.
Erdogan said that pro-Kurdish and anti-NATO rallies also took place in Stockholm while he was holding talks with Stoltenberg in Istanbul.
Stoltenberg said meanwhile that his chief of staff, who was at the meeting, reported that it took place in a "constructive atmosphere."
"Some progress has been made, and we will continue to work for the ratification of Sweden as soon as possible," he said.
Asked whether Sweden can join by the Vilnius summit, Stoltenberg said: "It is still possible. I cannot guarantee it of course."
Swedish envoy Oscar Stenstrom described the talks as "a step forward."
"But we are far from the finish line," he said.
"The fight against the PKK has intensified," Stenstrom said, noting that that charges were brought last week against a man for attempting to extort money on behalf of a group that is outlawed in Turkiye.
NATO requires the unanimous approval of all existing members to expand, and Turkiye and Hungary are the only countries that have not yet ratified Sweden's request to join. Erdogan said he planned to attend the July summit in Lithuania unless "extraordinary" circumstances arise.
On Tuesday, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said after meeting with Stoltenberg that it was "time to welcome Sweden" into the alliance, arguing that Stockholm had "an important and I think very appropriate process on its accession to address appropriate concerns of other allies."
Sweden has amended its constitution and strengthened its anti-terror laws since it applied to join NATO just over a year ago. This week, the Swedish government also decided to extradite a Turkish citizen resident in Sweden who was convicted for drug offenses in Turkiye in 2013.
Sweden and Finland applied to become NATO members in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, abandoning decades of nonalignment.
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Badendieck reported from Istanbul. Associated Press writer Lorne Cook in Brussels contributed to this report