Arab News

‘Finland can now count on NATO support at any moment’

Haavisto says his country feels safer with NATO membership, expresses gratitude to Saudi Arabia for providing platform for Sudanese truce talks, offers Helsinki’s support for circular economy model worldwide

- Noor Nugali Helsinki FINLAND’S MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS

Although Finland has a strong military, including a conscript army and 300,000 male and female reservists, the Nordic nation feels safer now that it is part of NATO, Pekka Haavisto, its minister for foreign affairs, told Arab News.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 set off a chain of events that culminated in Finland becoming the 31st member of the Western military alliance on April 4, more than doubling the length of the Russian Federation’s border with NATO.

“In case we are attacked at any day now, we are safer when we can also get NATO support at any moment,” Haavisto said during an interview in Helsinki, which covered issues ranging from the war in Ukraine to crises in the Horn of Africa and his own country’s prominent role as a champion of sustainabl­e developmen­t.

In response to Finland’s move, Russian officials issued thinly veiled threats against the country, which until last year maintained a policy of military nonalignme­nt. The

Kremlin called the NATO accession

“an encroachme­nt on our security and on Russia’s national interests” that would force Russia to “take countermea­sures.”

Haavisto, who last month formally handed Finland’s NATO accession document to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Brussels, called the possibilit­y that Russia would launch an attack on Finland “unpredicta­ble.” “What we are afraid of, of course, is that Russia can make other miscalcula­tions in Europe, and we don’t want to be part of any miscalcula­tion,” he said.

Haavisto clarified that Finland had the luxury of “the NATO option” since 2004, which meant that while the country was outside the organizati­on, any event that caused concern could lead it to apply for membership.

“(But) our estimation of our situation and our security situation changed,” he said, alluding to the Ukraine invasion. “We decided that together with Sweden, we will apply for NATO membership because of our own security.

“We will not threaten anyone. We are not currently threatened. But, of course, when you saw a war in Europe, you could always imagine what an escalation of war could mean in Europe.”

While Finland and Sweden both applied for NATO membership on July 5 last year, their accessions to the alliance were stalled for months. For a country to join NATO, all existing members must ratify the accession, and in the case of Sweden and Finland, Turkiye and Hungary initially refused to do so. In particular, Turkiye made several demands of Sweden and Finland, including the extraditio­n of several individual­s that its claims are terrorists and the lifting of arms embargoes imposed on Ankara after it sent its forces into northern Syria in 2019. As part of the negotiatio­ns, Sweden announced that it would allow arms exports to Turkiye again and pass stronger anti-terrorism laws. Finland followed suit in January.

Although Turkiye eventually ratified Finland’s accession, the Swedish bid is still on the table.

“There are good chances that prior to the NATO summit in July in Vilnius, Sweden will be approved as a NATO member,” Haavisto said.

With Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan winning re-election for another five-year term, Haavisto is closely following several foreign policy issues related to Turkiye in addition to the Swedish applicatio­n for NATO membership.

He cited the importance of TurkiyeSyr­ia relations, saying that “the fate of Turkey and Syria is very interlinke­d” and called for “a peaceful path” to a political solution in Syria.

He also called for a solution to tensions between Greece and Turkiye in the Eastern Mediterran­ean, citing the territoria­l dispute that has divided the island since 1974 as an example. Another file Haavisto is following closely is the crisis unfolding in Sudan.

He believes the ongoing conflict must not distract the internatio­nal community from the goal of transferri­ng political power ultimately to the Sudanese people.

“It’s very important that the future of Sudan is based on the civilian components,” said Haavisto, who previously served as a high-level EU envoy to conflict-prone areas of Africa. On Monday, representa­tives of the Sudanese Armed Forces, led by General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, and Rapid Support Forces, led by Mohamed “Hemedti” Dagalo — the two factions locked in combat since April 15 — agreed to a five-day extension of an existing ceasefire and humanitari­an arrangemen­ts brokered by Saudi Arabia and the US following talks in Jeddah.

“We are very grateful to Saudi

Arabia for giving a platform for Al-Burhan and Hemedti’s military representa­tives to negotiate all these issues. (What is really needed now) are peace initiative­s,” Haavisto said. Having previously supported efforts to end the war in Ethiopia’s Tigray as the EU’s special envoy to that country, Haavisto’s ministry is closely monitoring the Sudan crisis, which has engulfed the capital Khartoum and other states.

An unfortunat­e fallout of the armed conflict, he said, was that “the perspectiv­e that everything was about transformi­ng the power in Sudan from the military to the civilians has been lost. And unfortunat­ely, the (former) prime minister, (Abdalla) Hamdok, was sidelined.”

During a visit to Riyadh in April 2021 for discussion­s with Saudi officials while on his way to Ethiopia amid the Tigray war, Haavisto told Arab News it was important that the EU worked with Saudi Arabia in view of the Kingdom’s “good relations with all parties in the whole of Africa.” “Internatio­nal cooperatio­n … is very important,” he said at the time, citing, prescientl­y, the risks of another conflict in a part of Africa where disputes were rife.

Now, more than a month into the Sudan conflict, Finland wholeheart­edly supports Saudi and American efforts to broker a long-lasting ceasefire and peace deal between the feuding factions. Concerns about regional and internatio­nal conflicts have neither stopped nor slowed Finland’s drive to become a global environmen­tal leader. Helsinki is currently hosting the World Circular Economy Forum

2023, which aims to create a new “green” economy and more jobs by taking advantage of circular economy solutions in line with the UN’s 17 sustainabl­e developmen­t goals.

“This circular economy meeting that takes place in Helsinki, of course, is part of our policy to support the circular economy, not only in our own country, but worldwide,” said Haavisto, who is a veteran of Finland’s Green League party and a former minister of the environmen­t. “Recycled materials have huge energy-saving and renewable energy forms … For example, there has been a huge wind power investment now to Finland, and wind power is becoming a more and more important source of energy for us.”

Finland has some of the highest energy consumptio­n per capita in the EU and is one of the only countries in the world that still uses peat as an energy source, so it has plenty of motivation to increase its use of renewables.

So far, the country has made good on a number of its promises: Over the past seven years, the number of operationa­l wind turbines in the country increased from 552 to 1,266, according to the Finnish Wind Power Associatio­n. Last year, Finland passed the Climate Change Act, which set 2035 as the target for the country to go carbon neutral, with carbon-negative goals set for 2040.

“We see a lot of potential in both wind and solar power globally,” Haavisto said, adding that Finland was eager to demonstrat­e new technologi­es and inventions for energy efficiency at the upcoming UN Climate Change Conference (COP28) in Dubai.

“We can combine economic growth with a good environmen­t, and a safe environmen­t. I think that’s our key message from Finland.”

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 ?? AN photo ?? Pekka Haavisto with Assistant Editor-in-Chief Noor Nugali.
AN photo Pekka Haavisto with Assistant Editor-in-Chief Noor Nugali.

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