Santa Fe New Mexican

Amid election, Finland has eyes on Russia

- By Erika Solomon

NUIJAMAA, Finland — Poking up through the snow drifts on the Finnish-Russian border lies a symbol of Moscow’s biggest provocatio­n yet toward NATO’s newest member: a sprawling heap of broken bicycles.

The battered bikes are sold for hundreds of dollars on the Russian side to asylum-seekers from as far away as Syria and Somalia. They are then encouraged — sometimes forced, according to Finnish guards — to cross the border. Finns say it is a hybrid warfare campaign against their country, using some of the world’s most desperate people, just as it is staking out a new position in a shifting world order.

“Some of the bikes didn’t even have pedals — sometimes they’d link arms to help each other keep moving,” said Ville Kuusisto, a Finnish border guard master sergeant at the crossing near the Russian town of Vyborg.

As Finns vote Sunday for a new president, who will be responsibl­e for foreign policy and act as commander in chief, Finland has become fixated on its 830-mile border, the longest with Russia of any NATO country. How Finns handle the challenges there is critical not only for them, but also for their new allies on both sides of the Atlantic.

The presidenti­al election, now in its second and final round, is the first since Finland officially joined NATO last year after decades of nonalignme­nt, looking to bolster its own security after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Russia warned Finland of “countermea­sures” for its accession, which the Finns suspect they are now seeing in the form of infrastruc­ture sabotage and cyberattac­ks. But it is the arrival of some 1,300 “human weapons,” as Finnish politician­s have described them, in the past few months that has stirred the most public attention and anxiety.

European officials have repeatedly raised alarm over migrants being encouraged to cross into their borders by Russia and its allies, with many concerned that the aim is to destabiliz­e European government­s and stoke discord in a bloc sharply divided over how to handle immigratio­n.

In December, Finland closed all of its crossings with Russia. Now, it is preparing a law that Finnish media has said may include provisions to allow Finland to force people back over the border — a practice known as “pushbacks,” which are illegal under European and internatio­nal law. Finnish officials have so far declined to comment on such measures.

Both presidenti­al candidates headed to the final round Sunday — Pekka Haavisto, of the left-leaning Greens, and center-right Alexander Stubb — have staked out a hard line not only against Moscow, but also the asylum-seekers.

“People see through this Russian game quite clearly,” Haavisto said in an interview. Asked how he felt about the calls for potential pushbacks, he said humanitari­an laws banning pushbacks may need to be changed to recognize what he described as a new form of hybrid warfare.

Stubb said force on the border was necessary because “the only thing Putin and Russia understand is power, usually raw power,” referring to President Vladimir Putin of Russia.

Whoever wins Sunday will take the lead in shaping Finland’s new role in NATO. But the migration issue is now likely to absorb much of their attention, something security experts say could be an intended distractio­n.

“This border problem is not the most urgent issue right now, but it’s now an issue that will consume the bandwidth of the future president and the Finnish government,” said Matti Pesu, a security analyst at the Finnish Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs.

The crossings into Finland are the latest iteration of the deadly border politics that have played out since 2021, when Belarus, a veritable satrapy of Moscow, offered entry to thousands of migrants, allowing them to cross to Poland. Many ended up trapped between the two countries, beaten by border guards, who forced them back and forth over the border.

This is not the first time an influx has reached the country — there were surges in 2015 and 2016, when over 1 million people made their way to Europe, mostly fleeing war in Syria and ending up in Germany. But since then, the border has gone mostly quiet.

Finnish officials say that, counter to a past understand­ing between the two countries, Russia is now letting people without Finnish visas through its checkpoint­s.

Finnish border guards said that when they called their counterpar­ts last year to complain, the Russians insisted they were simply following procedures and could not deny people the right to cross.

Moayed Salami, 36, a Syrian who reached the crossing in November, said his experience showed Russia was clearly using the asylum-seekers as pawns — but willing ones.

He and seven other applicants interviewe­d, all of whom arrived before Finland closed its border, described being escorted through three layers of Russian checkpoint­s, where their passports were taken and their entry visas to Russia were canceled. He and some others said Russian authoritie­s then followed them until the very last stretch before the border.

“What I keep telling the Finnish media, when they say we are being exploited by Russia, is that it does not matter,” Salami said. “How could it? We needed a way out. If we had to flee via Mars, we would do it.”

Maria Zacharova, Russia’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n, has said the accusation that Russia was deliberate­ly facilitati­ng the migrants was not only false, but “another example of the West’s double standards or lack of standards at all.”

 ?? JUHO KUVA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Finnish border guard Ville Kuusisto last week at a crossing to Russia in Nuijamaa, Finland. As Finns prepare to vote for a new president, the country has become fixated on its 830-mile border, the longest with Russia of any NATO country.
JUHO KUVA/THE NEW YORK TIMES Finnish border guard Ville Kuusisto last week at a crossing to Russia in Nuijamaa, Finland. As Finns prepare to vote for a new president, the country has become fixated on its 830-mile border, the longest with Russia of any NATO country.

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