Russia warned Finland’s move to lift its ban on hosting nuclear weapons would stoke tensions in Europe and trigger a response from Moscow.
Finnish law has historically prohibited the importation or deployment of a nuclear weapon anywhere on its territory—but this is expected to change soon.
(Fixes typo in headline) By Dmitry Antonov MOSCOW, March 6 (Reuters) - Russia said on Friday it would respond if Finland placed nuclear weapons on its territory, saying such a move would make the ...
Nordic and Canadian leaders meet in Oslo to discuss Arctic security, Ukraine support and nuclear deterrence as Finland’s ...
Beyond, up a gentle slope, looms Russia. Finns used to drive across here to fill up on half-price gasoline. That was before ...
With the EU still importing over 50% of its energy and facing persistently high electricity bills, the debate over a nuclear ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Nato has increased its presence in the Arctic since Finland joined the military alliance [Getty Images] Finland plans to lift its ...
The proposed law change would bring the country in line with NATO's nuclear-deterrence architecture, the government argues.
As European allies quietly explore France's nuclear umbrella amid doubts about U.S. reliability, Canada faces an ...
NATO member Finland does not intend ​to host nuclear weapons on ‌its soil in peace time, President Alexander Stubb said on ...
The government says the nation's defence environment has "significantly changed" since Russia's invasion of Ukraine.