Russia, Finland and Trump
In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell was granted a patent for the telephone. In 1918, Finland signed a peace treaty with Germany shortly after declaring independence from Russia. In 1936, Adolf Hitler ordered Nazi troops into the Rhineland,
This is the text of an address given by the president of the Republic of Finland, Alexander Stubb, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Feb. 24.
Finland’s President Alexander Stubb said neighboring Russia won’t stop with Ukraine if it’s not countered with strength in any negotiations over a ceasefire or peace.
The Finnish authorities suggested that the ship, which was seized on suspicion of involvement in the cutting of undersea cables, had ties to Russia.
The United States will lose if Russia wins its war in Ukraine, Finnish President Alexander Stub said on Monday (February 24), as fears mount in Europe about U.S. President Donald Trump's intentions three years since Moscow's invasion.
The shift in U.S. support for Ukraine in its war with Russia, which enters its fourth year on Monday, has raised alarms in Kyiv and in capitals across Europe. A new documentary finds that those anxieties are especially high in some of Russia’s neighbors on the Baltic Sea.
The United States will lose if Russia wins its war in Ukraine, Finland's president said on Monday, as fears mount in Europe about President Donald Trump's intentions three years after Moscow's invasion.
Finland must be prepared for increase in Russian hybrid influencing once the war in Ukraine ends, warns intelligence agency - Anadolu Ajansı
Sweden and Finland, two nations once famed for their neutrality, have arguably found a business and security boom in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Less than three years after applying
The Finnish Security and Intelligence Service's latest national security overview warns that Finland must be prepared for an increase in Russian hybrid influencing once the war in Ukraine ends.
The frequency of cable incidents in the Baltic Sea has been "exceptional" in recent years, but state actors have more effective ways of performing underwater sabotage than by dragging anchors, Finland's intelligence service chief said.
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