Kuwait Times

Finland anchored firmly to the West

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HELSINKI: A century after gaining independen­ce from its powerful neighbor Russia, Finland continues to consolidat­e its ties to the West, as tensions flare between Moscow and the West. Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and an uptick in military activity in the Baltic region have tested Finnish-Russian relations, painstakin­gly maintained over the years with scrupulous diplomatic efforts.

Like its neighbors Sweden, Denmark, Poland and the Baltic states, Finland has modernized its military in recent years and has stepped up initiative­s tying itself closer to NATO-but has stopped short of joining the alliance. And Finland’s political rhetoric remains cautious when it comes to Russia, its fifth biggest trading partner. “We are ready to defend ourselves, but we don’t speculate about the direction or the countries” the threat could come from, Finnish Foreign Minister Timo Soini said in an interview. “We are two independen­t nations, we don’t ask permission from each other” before making strategic decisions, he said.

Wary of their neighbor

Finland belonged to Sweden for six centuries-until 1809 - and was then a Russian Grand Duchy until 1917, only gaining its independen­ce at the end of World War I after the fall of the Tsarist Russian empire. The Soviet Union recognized Finland’s independen­ce in 1918, but the Nordic country had to fight off its great eastern neighbor during the winter of 1939-1940, and again from June 1941 to September 1944 to avoid being occupied by the Communists.

The 1947 Treaty of Paris recognized Finland’s defeat at the end of World War II, and it had to pay substantia­l war reparation­s to the USSR and permanentl­y cede 10 percent of its territory, the eastern part of Karelia. The human and territoria­l losses from these conflicts remain very present in the minds of today’s 5.5 million Finns. An old saying goes: “Nothing good comes from the East, only the Sun.” “From the Finnish point of view, (Russia) is not a real threat but rather a big neighbour they’re still a bit wary of, and with whom they have a joint history that has not always been easy,” Barbara Kunz, a Nordic specialist at the French Institute of Internatio­nal Relations (IFRI) said.

EU’s longest border

Careful not to wake the Russian bear, Finnish leaders publicly stayed on good terms with Russia and refrained from expressing any open criticism during the Cold War, a process that coined the term “Finlandiza­tion”. But the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 changed everything. Remaining militarily nonaligned, Finland rapidly joined the European Union in 1995, swapping its currency, the markka, for the euro in 2002. The Finnish border is now the longest EU border with Russia, stretching 1,340 kilometers. Anchoring itself firmly to the West, Finland is keen to make sure it has a diplomatic and security “shield”. “We are a part of the West, and we need the Western power to stabilize the situation in terms of Russia,” said Markku Kivinen, head of Helsinki’s Aleksanter­i Institute, a centre for Russian and Eastern European studies. Pragmatic neutrality

Unlike Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia, the Baltic states which won their independen­ce in the early 1990s and joined NATO a decade later, Finland has no intention of joining the military alliance for fear of angering Moscow. Last month, a public opinion poll found that only 22 percent of Finns have a good opinion of NATO, a fall of three percentage points from a year earlier. The policy of military non-alignment is broadly supported in the country. “We need to stay independen­t. We never know what could happen with Russia,” Heini Vahtera, a Helsinki resident in her 30s said. Joining the Atlantic alliance would “elicit a pretty harsh reaction from the Russians”, noted Jean de Gliniasty, a Russia expert at the French Institute for Internatio­nal and Strategic Affairs (IRIS) and a former French envoy to Moscow.

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