New Finnish Government Unlikely to Alter Relationship With NATO

© AP Photo / Markku RuottinenCenter Party chairman Juha Sipila makes a speech at the party's election celebrations in Oulu, Finland, Monday April 20, 2015, the day after the elections
Center Party chairman Juha Sipila makes a speech at the party's election celebrations in Oulu, Finland, Monday April 20, 2015, the day after the elections - Sputnik International
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Finland’s newly elected leadership is unlikely to change the country’s relations with NATO, experts interviewed by Sputnik said Monday.

MOSCOW, April 20 (Sputnik) — Finland's opposition Center Party won Sunday's election in the country, securing 49 seats in the 200-member parliament, and coalition talks are currently underway.

“Since Finland is not a member of the alliance and already as close to the alliance as it can possibly be without being a member, I don’t think it will make much difference,” Nordic defense and security policy researcher Peter Viggo Jakobsen at the Institute for Strategy of the Royal Danish Defense College said.

Finland has long cooperated closely with the alliance by contributing personnel, participating in exercises and adopting NATO procedures and standards, the expert said. “If this policy remains unchanged, I don’t think it will affect its ties with the alliance.”

NATO will not make any official moves toward Finland, as it is up to Helsinki to determine its relationship to the alliance, Jakobsen explained.

“As long as Finland does not change its formal cooperation with the alliance or engage in closer military cooperation with Russia, I cannot see why NATO would want to react," he said.

“Regardless of who won, status quo in the NATO-Finland relationship was always the most likely outcome of the election, so from my perspective this really does not change anything,” the expert concluded.

According to Finnish political activist Johan Backman, Finland, as well as Sweden, has already allowed for “NATO occupation," though more than 70 percent of Finns do not support the country’s membership in the alliance.

In September 2014, the two non-member states signed a Memorandum of Understanding with NATO, which enables the alliance to deploy its forces on their territory, though only by invitation.

“NATO is already at Russian borders, they are now preparing for some kind of massive provocation and military conflict, for weakening Russia,” Backman told Sputnik.

The Finnish Defense Forces are currently facing a turmoil, with a “revolutionary group of officers" spreading anti-Russian propaganda and demands to join Finland with NATO, Backman said, adding that these officers form a “virtual military coup,” being very active in social media and the press.

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