By Anne Kauranen
HELSINKI, March 13 (Reuters) – NATO member Finland does not intend to host nuclear weapons on its soil in peacetime, President Alexander Stubb mentioned on Friday, aligning with insurance policies in neighbouring Nordic international locations.
The president made his feedback after Finland’s authorities final week unveiled plans to elevate a longstanding ban on nuclear arms on its territory, drawing criticism from neighbouring Russia in addition to Finnish opposition events.
“Finland does not need nuclear weapons in peacetime. This is about nuclear deterrence — a deterrent to ensure they would never have to be used,” Stubb instructed reporters in Helsinki on Friday.
The Kremlin final week mentioned it will reply if Finland positioned nuclear weapons on its territory and that such a transfer would make the Nordic nation extra susceptible.
“This is a statement that leads to an escalation of tensions on the European continent,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov instructed reporters at the time.
The opposition Social Democratic Party, which holds a lead in opinion polls forward of an election for parliament subsequent yr, has mentioned Finland ought to clarify it will not need nuclear arms on its territory throughout peacetime.
Finland has a longstanding custom of constructing broad political consensus throughout get together strains when introducing main legislative modifications associated to nationwide safety.
The authorities has mentioned its nuclear modification was vital to take full benefit of NATO’s deterrence and defence and to align with Nordic neighbours.
Finland’s Nuclear Energy Act, handed in 1987, prohibits the import, manufacture, possession and detonation of nuclear explosives on its soil, seen by some Finns as a clause that might profit solely Russia in case of warfare.
While Finland maintained neutrality through the Cold War period, the nation in 2023 joined the NATO alliance in response to nuclear-armed Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine the previous yr.
(Reporting by Anne Kauranen in Helsinki, further reporting by Essi Lehto, enhancing by Terje Solsvik and Alex Richardson)