HELSINKI – Finnish Defence Minister Antti Hakkanen hailed plans on June 25 for six Nato member states including Britain and France to participate in land forces that are to be established in northern Finland.
Finland, which has a longer border with Russia than any other Nato state, has strengthened the frontier in the two years since it joined the military alliance following a policy U-turn after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
“I am very pleased that yesterday, in connection with the ministerial meeting, we were able to announce that Sweden, the United Kingdom, France, Norway, Denmark and Iceland are set to join FLF Finland,” Mr Hakkanen said on X, referring to what Nato calls Forward Land Forces.
Nato leaders were meeting on June 25 in The Hague.
Helsinki and Stockholm agreed in 2024 that Sweden would lead the establishment of a Nato land force in Finland and invited other allies to participate.
The number of troops is yet to be defined. But the Finnish defence ministry has said that there is a plan for up to a brigade – about 5,000 soldiers – and a significant number of equipment to be brought in if the security situation worsens.
The first Nato land forces will start to arrive this year and be placed above the Arctic circle in Rovaniemi and Sodankyla, it said.
In addition to the foreign reinforcement force in the north, Finland will host a new Nato land force headquarters for officers in Mikkeli, southern Finland, an about two-hour drive from the Finnish-Russian border.