The Finnish company will present the Steel Eagle drone with an extended range of action developed for Ukraine and Ukrainian specialists. Source: Finnish public service media company Yle, as reported by European Pravda Details: The Finnish company Insta is presenting a new drone at the SecD Day conference and exhibition,
In an NZZ interview, Finnish Foreign Minister Elina Valtonen warns that Russia's aggression is directed against all of Europe. Forcing Ukraine to accept a convenient peace would be dangerous for the whole world,
"Ukraine is fighting to defend not only its independence and peaceful future, but also the jointly agreed security order based on international law. As the previous Chairpersonships, Finland will keep support for Ukraine at the heart of the OSCE’s work," she noted.
Finnish Defence Minister Antti Häkkinen (NCP) hosts a meeting with his Nordic counterparts in Helsinki on Thursday. Finland is chair of the Nordic Defence Cooperation group this year, and Thursday's meeting marks its second of the year.
A researcher says that hardly anyone has high expectations for Finland's year-long leadership term of the OSCE. But Foreign Minister Elina Valtonen has a different view of the situation.
In Finland, the leadership of the Left Alliance party (Vasemmistoliitto) in one of the regions did not allow a candidate to run in municipal elections who
Finland presents the Steel Eagle ER, an extended-range drone developed with Ukrainian expertise, enhancing battlefield capabilities in modern warfare.
On the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Volodymyr Zelensky discussed with Finnish President Alexander Stubb steps to bring about a just peace and security guarantees. — Ukrinform.
In this article, a comrade in Kyiv talks about the current state of anarchist activities and future prospects in Ukraine. She also points out what could be learned in Finland from the Ukrainian experience.
President-elect Donald Trump has pledged to broker a peace deal in Ukraine, but as he prepares to take office, peace seems as elusive as ever.
A controversial memoir of a Finnish woman who migrated to Stalin’s Soviet Russia in the 1930s and escaped in 1941. Ninety years later, her granddaughter has translated the diary into English.