Hungary to let Sweden into Nato following jet fighter deal
- Prime Minister Viktor Orban confirmed that parliament would move next week to ratify the Nordic country’s accession to the defence alliance
- The agreement on fighter aircraft will expand Hungary’s fleet of Swedish-built Gripen warplanes to 18 from 14

Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban confirmed that his country will remove the last obstacle to Sweden’s Nato accession after the Nordic country agreed to sell Gripen jet fighters to Budapest.
The Hungarian parliament will take the “necessary decisions” to ratify the Nordic country’s Nato accession early next week, Orban said at a press conference with his Swedish counterpart Ulf Kristersson in the Hungarian capital on Friday.
The agreement on fighter jets will expand Hungary’s fleet of Swedish-built Gripen aircraft to 18 from 14, and it also helps rebuild ties between the two countries, according to the Hungarian premier.
He has previously blamed delays in the ratification process on a lack of trust following Swedish criticism over the erosion of democracy in Hungary.

Monday’s vote in Hungary’s parliament is the final approval needed for Sweden’s entry into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization – which will help the military alliance defend its eastern flank following Finland’s admission last April.