Henry Srebrnik, [Charlottetown, PEI] Guardian
Last month, neutral Finland told one million reservists that
they might be called up for military service. The country is concerned about Russian
activity in the Baltic Sea and Scandinavia.
For the past year, Russian aircraft have entered Finnish
airspace, and a suspected Russian submarine was detected in its coastal waters
near Helsinki in April.
In turn the five Nordic countries – Iceland, Sweden,
Denmark, Norway and Finland -- issued a statement on cooperating
on defence and cited the Russian “challenge” as their reason.
Finland shares a 1,340 kilometre border with
Russia -- the longest of any European nation apart from Ukraine -- and its relations with its giant neighbour have never been
happy.
The country was part of the Russian Empire after tsar Alexander
I wrested it from Sweden in a war in 1808-1809. That ended when Finland declared
its independence in December 1917, following the Bolshevik takeover of Russia.
In August 1939, Hitler’s Germany and Stalin’s Soviet Union
signed a nonaggression pact, which included a secret protocol relegating
Finland to the Soviet sphere of interest. When Finland refused to allow the
Soviet Union to build military bases on its territory, in order to safeguard
Leningrad, the latter invaded on Nov. 30, 1939.
The “Winter War” surprised the Soviets, as the Finns fought
valiantly for months. Among the weapons they used against tanks was the so-called
Molotov cocktail, which consists of a glass bottle semi-filled with flammable
liquid, usually gasoline. The name was coined as an insulting reference to
Soviet foreign minister Vyacheslav Molotov.
But the war ended with Stalin obtaining 12 per cent of
Finland’s total area. In a peace treaty signed on March 13, 1940, the Soviets
acquired the Karelian Isthmus as well as a swath of land north of Lake Ladoga,
providing a buffer for Leningrad. They also obtained four islands in the Gulf
of Finland and part of the Salla region in northern Finland.
When Germany invaded the Soviet Union in 1941, Finland joined
in, to regain its lost territory. The “Continuation War” saw the Finnish army,
under Marshal Baron Gustaf Mannerheim, advance to the outskirts of Leningrad by
December 1941.
But in June 1944 the Soviets opened a powerful offensive
against Finnish positions. The second war ended in an armistice in September
1944. In addition to the areas already lost, Finland also ceded Petsamo on the
Arctic Ocean. This was confirmed by the peace treaty signed between Finland and
the USSR in 1947.
But the Finns were lucky: they had managed to escape
occupation by the Soviets and Mannerheim avoided trial as a war criminal.
During the Cold War, Finland was officially neutral, but
remained under the influence of its larger neighbour during the long tenure of Urho
Kekkonen as its leader between 1950 and 1982, a policy known as
“Finlandization.” Even today, though members of the European Union, the Finns
remain outside the NATO alliance.
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