Sweden’s national flag has been raised at Nato headquarters, cementing the Nordic country’s place as the 32nd member of the alliance.
The ceremony came two years after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine persuaded Sweden’s reluctant public to seek safety under Nato’s security umbrella.
Under a steady rain, Swedish prime minister Ulf Kristersson and Nato secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg looked on as two soldiers raised the blue banner emblazoned with a yellow cross among the official circle of national flags at the headquarters in Brussels, Belgium.
“We are humble, but we are also proud. We know the expectations for Sweden are high, but we also have high expectations for ourselves,” Mr Kristersson told reporters minutes before the ceremony. “We will share burdens, responsibilities and risks with our allies.”
Sweden set aside decades of post-war neutrality when it formally joined Nato last Thursday.
Its neighbour Finland joined last year in another historic move ending years of military non-alignment.
Finland’s defence ministry welcomed “our brothers and sisters in arms”, saying “now we stand at the beginning of a new era. Together and with other allies in peace, in crisis and beyond”.
Russian president Vladimir Putin’s decision to order Russian troops into Ukraine in February 2022 triggered an about-face in public opinion in both countries, and within three months they had applied to join the world’s biggest security organisation.
Mr Putin claimed to have launched the war, at least in part, over Nato’s eastward expansion towards Russia but it has swollen the alliance’s ranks.
Nato leaders have promised that Ukraine will join one day, although almost certainly not while the conflict continues.
“When President Putin launched his full-scale invasion two years ago, he wanted less Nato, and more control over his neighbours. He wanted to destroy Ukraine as a sovereign state, but he failed,” Mr Stoltenberg said.
“Nato is now bigger and stronger. Ukraine is closer to Nato than ever before, and as the brave Ukrainians continue to fight for their freedom, we stand by their side.”
Sweden’s membership completes a strategic ring of Nato territory around the Baltic Sea. The country now benefits from the alliance’s collective security guarantee – Article 5 of its treaty – a vow that an attack on one of them will be met by a response from them all.
“We have chosen you, and you have chosen us. All for one, and one for all,” Mr Kristersson said, vowing that his country will uphold the values enshrined in Nato’s founding Washington Treaty.
“We are humble, but we are also proud. We know the expectations for Sweden are high, but we also have high expectations for ourselves,” he told reporters minutes before the ceremony. “We will share burdens, responsibilities and risks with our allies.”
The flag-raising ceremony came as 20,000 troops from 13 countries began Nato drills in northern Sweden as well as Finland and Norway.
The Nordic drill is part of wider exercises called Steadfast Defender 24, Nato’s largest in decades, with up to 90,000 troops taking part over several months to show any adversary that the alliance can defend all its territory from North America up to its borders with Russia.