
Russia’s hybrid attacks on Finland, like other Nato states, are also increasing, including GPS jamming along the border, the cutting of undersea cables and other sabotage attacks inside the country, which are seen as Moscow’s attempt to destabilise the West and retaliate for its backing of Ukraine.
Report has
it that Russia is building bases and expanding its military footprint near the
Finnish border, in a sign of where its swollen army could be moved after a
ceasefire in Ukraine.
New
satellite imagery has revealed columns of new troop tents, expanded military
bases and renovated Arctic airfields, all opposite Nato’s northeastern flank in
what could be a harbinger of a future war.
The
signals are elsewhere too. The Kremlin is expanding military recruitment,
increasing weapons production and upgrading logistical infrastructure along
Russia’s borders with Norway, Finland and the Baltics.
Finnish
defence officials say the new build-up is small-scale, but is likely being done
in preparation for tens of thousands of troops as well as military assets to be
redeployed to their border and further north to the Arctic.
While not
imminent, they told The Telegraph that the threat is very real. The officials
believe they have up to five years until Moscow can beef up its forces to
concerning levels if the full-scale war in Ukraine comes to and end.
“We joined
Nato, so we anticipated this,” said Major General Sami Nurmi, chief of strategy
of the Finnish defence forces. The military, he said, is “watching very closely
and preparing accordingly”.
“What we
are seeing are the preparations for the future” when Russia will bring back the
forces fighting in Ukraine, he told The Telegraph. “But the troops on our
borders will grow.”
He added:
“We do not see any immediate threat towards Finland.”
Donald
Trump said the same on Tuesday. Responding to Russia’s military manoeuvres, the
US president claimed he was “not worried at all” and that Finland and Norway
would be “very safe”.
Finland,
which was forced to cede territory to the Soviet Union in the Second World War,
spent decades perusing a policy of neutrality until it decided to join Nato in
2023 in the wake of Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.
The
country’s accession to the alliance extended Nato’s frontier with Russia by 835
miles, changing the military strategic situation in northern Europe.
Maj Gen
Nurmi is clear-eyed, but pragmatic about the new infrastructure and Russia’s
troop movement plans. “We do not want to be too alarmist,” he said. Watching
developments across the border “has been our daily business for hundreds of
years”.
Satellite
imagery has revealed that over 130 new troop tents have been erected in
Kamenka, less than 40 miles from Finland and 140 miles from Helsinki. The base,
which was unused before 2022, should now be able to house 2,000 troops.
Russia is
also expanding military infrastructure around the city of Petrozavodsk, 100
miles from the borders of Finland and Norway, which could serve as a new
headquarters for Moscow’s northwestern troops in a possible conflict with Nato.
The
photographs also show intensifying activity at the Soviet-era Arctic air bases
at Severomorsk-2 as well as Olenya, where nuclear-capable Tu-22 and Tu-95
strategic bombers have been moved. Russian helicopters have also been spotted
in the Arctic city of Murmansk for the first time in two decades.
Russia has
been forced to move expensive military assets north to get them out of the
range of Ukraine’s drones, which target air bases across Russia.
But Nato
fears that Moscow is expanding its military footprint further and further north
to extend its control over resources in the Arctic region, which is at the
centre of a new geopolitical rivalry.
“The
Arctic is the important theatre of the future,” said Maj Gen Nurmi. “This will
not change. We are working very closely with our Arctic allies to assess
Russia’s plans.”
But
changes are also happening at an organisational level as the Russian military
restructures itself to face its perceived growing threat of Nato to the
north-west.
Last year,
Moscow re-established the huge military district of Leningrad to increase its
military presence next to Finland, Estonia and Latvia. Small brigades that were
stationed there before the Ukraine war, will nearly triple in size to become
divisions of over 10,000 troops.
That
process has already started. In Kamenka, where the rows of tents have been
built, the 138th Motor Rifle Brigade there has become the 69th Motor Rifle
division.
“This is a
continuation of military plans before 2022 and response to new geopolitical
developments of Sweden and Finland joining Nato,” said Emil Kastehelmi, an
analyst at the Black Bird Group, a Finnish organisation that tracks Russian
military movements.
It is
difficult, he said, to interpret Russia’s actions as strictly either defensive
or offensive. “There a multitude of scenarios and uncertainties.”
In
February, Danish intelligence warned that Russia could launch a major land war
in Europe within five years if the war freezes in Ukraine. Others have
suggested it would take just two years for Moscow to be ready.
There are
other signs that Russia’s military is not preparing for peace. Putin has
ordered his military to increase its ranks to up to 1.5 million troops, up from
a million before the invasion of Ukraine, while its military spending will
reach 6pc of GDP this year, while Nato countries on average spend 2.71pc. Tanks
are being built at an increasing rate, but not being sent to Ukraine.
On
Finland’s eastern border, the first 22 miles of a planned 124-mile fence 15ft-high and fortified with barbed wire, cameras and sensors was completed
on Wednesday after Helsinki last year accused Moscow of directing migrants to
Finland in a “hybrid operation”.
What is
happening on the other side of that border is “high priority”, Jarmo Lindberg,
a Finnish MP and chief of defence from 2014 to 2019, told The Telegraph.
But
echoing the characteristic level-headedness of other Finnish officials towards
the manoeuvres, he said: “The latest movements and signs of construction are
just one more tactical or operational change in a long line of Russian
activities.”
The former
general agrees with estimates it will take up to five years to reconstitute
Russia’s military capabilities in the north after they were plundered for the
war in Ukraine. But the process is happening, he said.
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