Finland center will combat disinformation
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.