“How Putin’s war in Ukraine backfired and fueled NATO’s Nordic expansion”, NBC News

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In three short months, analysts say, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has reworked European security for decades to come — and not in Putin’s favor.

Things have not gone to plan for Vladimir Putin.

In December, the Russian president demanded that Ukraine ditch its bid to join NATO, the Transatlantic military alliance founded after WWII to counter the power of the Soviet Union, and that NATO forces retreat from Russia’s western flank.

Instead, with Putin’s military suffering stumbles and setbacks on the ground in Ukraine, his grander geopolitical goals are also falling apart.

Far from discouraging NATO expansion, Russia’s actions look set to double the length of its border with member nations, from the Arctic Circle to the Baltic Sea, and create a new frontier in its clash with the West.

Finland and Sweden formally submitted their membership applications in Brussels on Wednesday morning, ending long-held neutral stances that for Stockholm stretches back 200 years to the time of Napoleon.

The process of joining will take months and must be ratified by NATO’s 30 members. One member, Turkey, has already threatened to block both countries’ bids: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Monday criticized Sweden and Finland for their stance on terrorism, a possible veiled reference to perceived inaction over Kurdish fighters who have sought refuge in the two countries.

However, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg has warmly welcomed the dual application and said over the weekend that “Turkey has made it clear that their intention is not to block membership.” Germany’s top diplomat, Annalena Baerbock, has also voiced confidence  the pair will be admitted.

NATO holds ceremony to mark Sweden's and Finland's application for membership in Brussels
The Finnish and Swedish ambassadors to NATO formally handed in the two countries’ applications in Brussels early Wednesday.Johanna Geron / AP

It looks clear that two more nations with advanced, well-funded, multipurpose armed forces will soon join the mutual assurance of NATO’s Article 5, under which all member nations must defend an attack against another.

Finland had become such a byword for neutrality that the “Finlandization” of Ukraine was discussed as a compromise solution that Russia might accept to stave off war. Now Finland — and its Swedish neighbors — could be key new members of the Western alliance.

In three short months, analysts say, the invasion of Ukraine has reworked European security for decades to come — and not in Putin’s favor.

“I think it’s a total political and geostrategic game-changer, for northern Europe at least,” said Kate Hansen Bundt, secretary general of the Norwegian Atlantic Committee, a think tank based in Oslo.

“Putin’s getting the opposite of what he demanded in December. He wanted to close NATO’s open door, and now he has opened it wide for two new members.”