US President Joe Biden heads to the UK, then Lithuania for a NATO summit focusing on the conflict in Ukraine, and then Finland.
United States President Joe Biden has kicked off a three-nation trip dominated by a NATO summit aimed at showing solidarity with Ukraine amid disagreements over Kyiv’s possible accession into the alliance.
Biden departed Dover Air Force Base in Delaware and was due to arrive in the United Kingdom, a key US ally, late on Sunday.
The US president will meet the UK’s King Charles on Monday for the first time since his May coronation, the White House said, to hold talks focusing on environmental issues.
Biden will also meet Prime Minister Rishi Sunak at 10 Downing Street. Sunak’s spokesperson said their discussions would likely include the upcoming NATO summit and Ukraine.
“As we face new and unprecedented challenges to our physical and economic security, our alliances are more important than ever,” Sunak said in a statement released by his office on Saturday.
“The UK is Europe’s leading NATO ally, we are the United States’ most important trade, defence and diplomatic partner, and we are at the forefront of providing Ukraine with the support they need to succeed on the battlefield,” he added.
NATO summit in Lithuania
The main part of Biden’s Europe trip will be the NATO summit in the Lithuanian capital Tuesday and Wednesday, when the Western allies will discuss helping Ukraine oust invading Russian forces.
Biden is expected to use the summit to pressure Turkey into dropping opposition to Sweden’s NATO membership bid, after Ankara accused Stockholm of being too lenient toward groups it regards as a security threat, including Kurdish armed groups and people associated with a 2016 coup attempt.
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But the US president said he will resist calls for promising Ukraine quick entry into the alliance – a move Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan expressed public support for on Saturday.
Entry into NATO requires unanimous consent from all 31 members. Ukraine has demanded that the military alliance give a clear path to membership at this week’s summit, but the US and Germany have expressed strong hesitation over the possibility of welcoming a country at war that still has democratic reforms to undergo, insisting the focus should instead be on supplying weapons and ammunition.
“I don’t think there is unanimity in NATO about whether or not to bring Ukraine into the NATO family now, at this moment, in the middle of a war,” Biden said in a CNN interview previewing his trip.
He urged caution, saying the alliance could get drawn into the war with Russia due to NATO’s mutual defence pact.
NATO could decide to elevate its relationship with Ukraine, creating what would be known as the NATO-Ukraine Council and giving Kyiv a seat at the table for consultations.
A centrepiece of Biden’s visit to Lithuania will also be a speech at Vilnius University on Wednesday night, in which he will share his vision of “a strong, confident America flanked by strong, confident allies and partners taking on the significant challenges of our time, from Russia’s aggression in Ukraine to the climate crisis”.
Nordic leaders’ meeting in Finland
Biden’s last stop will be in Helsinki for talks with the leaders of the newest NATO member, Finland, and to attend a summit of US and Nordic leaders.
He will be the first US president to visit Helsinki since Donald Trump went five years ago to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Finland ended a history of nonalignment to become NATO’s 31st member on April 4.
While Finland and Sweden had filed a joint bid to access the military alliance in May 2022, Stockholm’s application was held back by Erdogan.
Sweden recently changed its “anti-terrorism” legislation and lifted an arms embargo on Turkey. But a man burned a Quran outside a mosque in Stockholm last month, and Erdogan signalled that this would pose another hurdle.
Turkey and the US are also at an impasse over the sale of F-16 fighter jets. Erdogan wants the upgraded planes, but Biden says Sweden’s NATO membership has to be dealt with first.