- March 30, 2023 Updated 4:57 p.m. ET
BRUSSELS — Finland won final approval on Thursday to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, a major shift in the balance of power between the West and Russia that was set off by Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
Turkey’s Parliament, in a session that went deep into the night, cast the last vote needed for Finland’s entry into NATO, greatly enlarging the alliance’s border with Russia in a strategic defeat for its president, Vladimir V. Putin. In invading Ukraine last year, he made it clear that he was intent on blocking NATO’s eastward expansion.
Finland, with its 830-mile border with Russia, offers NATO a much stronger position to deter aggression, offering access to a strong military, as well as Finnish airspace, ports and sea lanes. NATO will also be better able to defend the Baltic nations and the Arctic, said Matti Pesu, a security expert with the Finnish Institute of International Affairs.
“Finland will contribute to allied deterrence and defense, and NATO’s area of operations will significantly grow,” Mr. Pesu said.
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2023/03...e=articleShare