Orlando Sentinel

Leaders to meet today at 19th-century Helsinki palace,

- By Jari Tanner and Jan M. Olsen

HELSINKI — Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin will meet Monday at Finnish presidenti­al palace in Helsinki that overlooks the Baltic Sea — the same venue where two of their predecesso­rs met in 1990.

Finnish President Sauli Niinisto’s office said the U.S. and Russian leaders will hold their summit at the 19th-century Presidenti­al Palace, just a stone’s throw away from the capital’s iconic waterfront Market Square.

Putin and Trump have met twice before on the sidelines of internatio­nal meetings but the Helsinki summit will be their first official stand-alone meeting. President George H.W. Bush and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev held talks at the same venue in 1990.

To kick off the day, Trump and his wife, Melania, will join Niinisto and his wife, Jenni Haukio, for breakfast at Mantyniemi, another presidenti­al residence in Helsinki where the couple lives most of the time. Niinisto also will hold a bilateral meeting with Putin.

Finland, a Nordic nation of 5.5 million, has a long legacy of hosting U.S.-Soviet and U.S. Russian summits due to its geographic location and perceived neutrality. The last time a summit brought presidenti­al entourages from Moscow and Washington to Helsinki was in March 1997, when President Bill Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin held talks on arms control and NATO expansion.

In June, U.S. Marine Corps Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, met with Gen. Valery Gerasimov, the chief of the Russian military’s General Staff, in a manor house owned by the Finnish state to exchange views on U.S.-Russia military relations, Syria and internatio­nal security.

Along with the presidents, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will meet Monday at the Presidenti­al Palace.

Sari Autio-Sarasmo of the University of Helsinki’s Aleksanter­i Institute said the Finnish capital and Vienna, the capital of Austria, were important conduits between the East and the West during the Cold War. While both European cities were centers of espionage, Helsinki specialize­d in relaying informatio­n and acting as a gobetween for world’s two superpower­s.

“As a member of the European Union, Finland doesn’t anymore emphasize its neutrality, but strong expertise, particular­ly on Russia, and good location make Finland a very useful meeting place,” said AutioSaras­mo, who studies Cold War history.

President Gerald Ford and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev met in Helsinki in 1975 to sign the landmark Helsinki Accords, a watershed commitment to peace, security and human rights.

Finland joined the European Union in 1995, but has remained outside of NATO as a militarily non-aligned nation in a similar way as neighbor Sweden.

The 32,292-square-foot Presidenti­al Palace, renovated in 2015, has hosted other prominent guests, including Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II and the late Pope John Paul II. The palace was built for a Finnish merchant in the early 19th century on the grounds of a former salt store house.

Finland was integrated into Russia’s Czarist Empire as an independen­t Grand Duchy in 1809 after being part of the Kingdom of Sweden for nearly 700 years. The building was completed in 1845 at the request of Emperor Nicholas I and became the Imperial Palace.

Key rooms were modeled after the Winter Palace in St. Petersburg, the official residence of Russian monarchs.

Russian Emperor Alexander II visited the palace several times. He was popular with Finns due to his policies sympatheti­c to Finland.

During World War I, the grand residence temporaril­y housed a military hospital. Following Finland’s independen­ce from Russia in 1917, it was renamed the Presidenti­al Palace in 1921. It now is the working residence of Finland’s president.

 ?? EMMI KORHONEN/GETTY-AFP ?? A policeman rides in front of the Presidenti­al Palace, site of the summit, on Saturday in Helsinki, the Finnish capital.
EMMI KORHONEN/GETTY-AFP A policeman rides in front of the Presidenti­al Palace, site of the summit, on Saturday in Helsinki, the Finnish capital.

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