The Mercury News

Finland center will combat disinforma­tion

- By Jari Tanner

HELSINKI — A center to combat such things as disinforma­tion and fake news will be built in Finland following an agreement Tuesday of nine countries from the European Union and NATO.

The countries — Britain, Finland, France, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Sweden and the United States — signed the memorandum to set up the so-called “hybrid threat” center in Helsinki with the support of the Finnish government.

The center will become operationa­l later this year and will initially have a budget of $1.6 million and be staffed by a group of experts and reasearche­rs from the founding members.

Lorenz MeyerMinne­man, head of NATO’s civil preparedne­ss unit, said the European Center of Excellence for Countering Hybrid Threats will serve as a platform for EU and NATO to pool resources and share expertise. Over recent years, campaigns to discredit, misinform and spread fake news have become an increasing problem for policymake­rs in Europe and the United States.

“Working together is essential in building resilience to hybrid threats,” said Meyer-Minneman. Finnish Foreign Minister Timo Soini said the EU and NATO will face “the challenge of hybrid threats hand in hand.”

“Countering hybrid threats is a European priority,” Soini said, adding, without elaboratin­g, that Finland itself has become a target for “hybrid influencin­g” through constant disinforma­tion campaigns and “malicious activities in the cyber domain.”

The EU and NATO pledged in July at the military alliance’s summit in Warsaw to increase cooperatio­n in the areas of cyber defense and countering hybrid threats.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States