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History of Finnish Foreign Policy

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Dept. of Politics, University of Helsinki. Docent Juhana Aunesluoma ... A long view to the history of Finnish foreign policy. historical continuities ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: History of Finnish Foreign Policy


1
History of Finnish Foreign Policy
  • Lecture series Finnish Foreign Policy
  • Autumn term 2009
  • 10 September 2009
  • Dept. of Politics, University of Helsinki
  • Docent Juhana Aunesluoma
  • http//www.valt.helsinki.fi/blogs/jauneslu/index.h
    tm

2
This lecture
  • A long view to the history of Finnish foreign
    policy
  • historical continuities/discontinuities, patterns
    of thought, events and main phases
  • 1 until 1945
  • Finland in the Russian empire 1809-1917
  • early independence 1917-1939
  • Second World War 1939-45
  • 2 from 1945 onwards
  • the Cold War and its end 1945-1991

3
Grand Duchy in the Russian empire
  • How long are the roots of Finnish foreign policy?
  • is there a Finnish foreign policy before 19th
    century?
  • Finns in the Swedish kingdom
  • Finlands position within the Russian empire two
    schools of thought
  • 1 idealism
  • 2 realism
  • How far Finnish foreign policy in the 20th
    century was a synthesis of these traditions?
    After 1945? After 1995?

4
Two schools western-oriented liberals
  • Western oriented liberalism legalism,
    scandinavianism
  • A. I. Arwidsson, Helsingfors Dagblad liberals,
    Swedish Party, constitutionalists
  • Finlands connection with Scandinavia
  • Western values, international norms, the rule of
    law

5
Two Schools realism
  • Realism, accomodation and adaptation
  • Gustaf Mauritz Armfelt, Johan Vilhelm Snellman,
    Yrjö-Sakari Yrjö-Koskinens Finnish Party
  • Finlands position within the Russian Empire
  • Loyalty to Russia
  • The development of the Finnish nation-state

6
Early independence
  • Independence and the orientation towards Germany
    1917-18
  • Finlands recognition by the Western powers 1919
  • 1920 Tartu Peace treaty with Soviet Russia
  • Border state orientation, 1922 Warzaw treaty
    rejected in the Finnish parliament
  • League of Nations membership 1920
  • international law, collective security, Leagues
    Council membership 1927-30
  • Normalisation of relations with Soviet Union
    1932 non-aggression pact
  • Main policy line in the 1930s reliance on
    neutrality and Nordic orientation
  • Finland sought support from Sweden, with limited
    success

7
The Second World War The Winter War
  • Preceding events
  • Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact August 1939 Finland
    within the Soviet sphere of influence
  • Autumn 1939 Negotiations in Moscow on bases and
    territorial changes, Finns resist demands
  • Winter War 1939-40
  • Soviet attack on Finland 30 November, 3 month
    war, 28 000 Finns killed, 125 000 Soviet troops
  • Moscow peace March 1940 territorial changes
    imposed on Finland
  • 1940-41 interim peace
  • Finns fearful of Soviet intentions
  • revanchism
  • Nazi Germany began to support Finland from the
    summer 1940 onwards
  • Finns align themselves with Germany in the
    winter-spring 1941

8
The Second World War The Continuation War
  • Finns began their attack on the Soviet Union
    June 1941
  • alongside and coordinated with Germanys
    Operation Barbarossa
  • 1942-43 Trench warfare
  • President Risto Ryti and the separate war
    -thesis
  • no formal alliance with Germany
  • co-belligerency, brothers in arms, Finland
    within Germanys coalition

9
Out of the War
  • The Stalingrad effect Finns began to seek a
    way out of the war in winter-spring 1943
  • Spring 1944 first talks with the Soviets, Finns
    did not accept the terms
  • Soviet offensive summer 1944 Soviet advance
    falls short allowing new negotiations
  • Marshal Mannerheim became President 1944-46
  • armistice talks renewed, end of hostilities in
    September 1944
  • The Lappland War 1944-45 Finns turn against the
    Germans

10
The Cold War
  • In 1944 Finland lay within the Soviet sphere of
    influence
  • Allied (Soviet) Control Commission in Helsinki
    1944-47
  • Treaty structure
  • 1947 Paris Peace Treaty
  • 1948 Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual
    Assistance (FCMA)
  • Finlands international position anchored into
    the Cold War East-West division
  • three spheres East-West relations, Nordic
    region, Europe
  • Europe seen as a bipolar system under superpower
    hegemony
  • bipolar superpower hegemony provided the European
    system with stability
  • Finland accepted the systemic constraints on its
    foreign political behaviour
  • allowing certain (adequate) room for Finnish
    autonomy, and the preservation of its core
    interests

11
Paasikivi-Kekkonen line
  • Realism, geopolitical facts
  • Finland must act and face the Soviet Union alone
  • acceptance of legitimate Soviet security
    interests
  • reaassurance (appeasement) of the Soviet Union
  • Foreign policy adjusted to accomodate Soviet
    interests, with the hope that internally Finland
    remains free
  • Finns do this adjustment voluntarily
  • Primacy of military-security issues in foreign
    policy
  • other sectors and dimensions evaluated from that
    perspective
  • Centralisation of foreign policy decision-making
    into the hands of the President
  • following centralising developments during the
    Second World War

12
Paasikivi
  • J. K. Paasikivis presidency 1946-1956
  • Finlands first post-war elections 1945
  • no to Marshall Plan in 1947
  • 1947 Peace treaty
  • 1948 FCMA treaty
  • 1955 United Nations Membership

13
The struggle for neutrality
  • Evolution of neutrality policy from mid-1950s
    onwards
  • Nikita Khrushchev accepts Finnish neutrality 1956
  • Western powers acknowledge Finnish neutrality
    also, suspicions over Soviet influence
  • Changing currents in Soviet thinking
  • increased criticism towards Finland foreign
    polucy Soviet pressure on Finnish neutrality
    policy from 1968 onwards
  • Pressure relaxes after 1978
  • Western powers supportive of Finnish foreign
    policy 1970s
  • Finlands low profile foreign policy in the 1980s
  • cultivation of contacts to the West, multilateral
    diplomacy, science, education, culture, UN

14
Kekkonen
  • Urho Kekkonens presidency 1956-1981
  • the crises of 1958-61
  • Finlands economic integration agreements 1961
    (free trade with EFTA) and 1973 (free trade with
    EEC)
  • 1975 Conference for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe
  • the debate on Finlandization in the 1970s

15
Finlandization
  • Two different aspects of Finlandization
  • 1 Domestic political culture
  • how was the Soviet card played in Finnish
    domestic politics Soviet influence in Finland
  • self-censorship open criticism of the Soviet
    Union a sensitive issue
  • 2 Foreign policy
  • as a legitimate foreign policy strategy of
    reassurance (or appeasement)

16
Koivisto
  • President Mauno Koivistos (1981-1994) careful
    policy
  • careful, low key continuation of the
    Paasikivi-Kekkonen line
  • the parliamentarisation of Finnish domestic
    politics
  • support to Mikhail Gorbachev and superpower
    détente all the way to the end
  • careful widening of the scope of Finnish
    neutrality policy 1989-1991

17
Finland and the end of the Cold War
  • When did the Cold War end?
  • on Finlands behalf in September 1990
  • the unilateral abrogation of the restrictions of
    the 1947 and 1948 treaties, so called Operation
    PAX
  • Decision to apply for EU-membership 1991-92
  • following Sweden and Austria
  • negotiation process 1992-94
  • following referendum membership in 1995

18
Further Reading
  • Tuomo Polvinen, Between East and West. Finland in
    International Politics, 1944-1947 (1986)
  • Max Jakobson, Finland in the New Europe (1998)
  • Klaus Törnudd, Finnish Neutrality Policy During
    the Cold War, SAIS Review 2/2005, 43-52
  • Klaus Törnudd, Ties that Bind to the Recent
    Past. Debating Security Policy in Finland within
    the Context of Membership of the European Union,
    Cooperation and Conflict 1/1996, 37-68.
  • Norbert Götz, In a Class by Itself. Cold War
    Politics and Finlands Position vis-à-vis the
    United Nations, 1945-1956, Journal of Cold War
    Studies, 2/2008, 71-96.
  • Mikko Majander, The paradoxes of
    Finlandisation, RUSI Journal, August 1999,
    76-83.
  • Kimmo Rentola, From Half-Adversary to Half-Ally
    Finland in Soviet Policy, 1953-58, Cold War
    History 1/2000, 75-102.
  • Seppo Hentilä, Maintaining Neutrality between
    the Two German States Finland and Divided
    Germany until 1973, Contemporary European
    History 4/2006, 473-493.
  • Esko Antola, The Burden of History. Finland as a
    Status Quo Country, The International Spectator
    (1994)
  • Jussi Hanhimäki, Scandinavia and the United
    States (1997)
  • Mauno Koivisto, Witness to History (1997)

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