Struggle for influence flares up in the Arctic after Finland's accession to NATO
It seems that the world has bid farewell to the days of
peace forever. About 13 months since the start of the Russian-Ukrainian war and
the subsequent suffocating economic crises that struck the entire world, NATO
has decided to accept Finland's membership, defying Moscow's threats in this
matter that threatens its national security, given the expansion of the
alliance, as the direct border between Russia and NATO becomes 1,300 kilometers, in addition to the alliance’s
position in the Arctic, which threatens to widen the circle of conflict.
For its part, Russia warned of an exacerbation of the crisis
in the region. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that NATO's embrace of
Finland is a violation of Russia's national security and interests, and that
Moscow is closely monitoring how NATO exploits the territory of Finland in
terms of placing weapons, systems and infrastructure there.
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu confirmed that
Finland's accession to NATO and the latter's move to raise its combat readiness
increases the risk of an exacerbation of the crisis in the region, and he
pointed out that Russia has already transferred military aircraft to Belarus
that are capable of carrying nuclear warheads.
At the level of Russian diplomacy, Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov warned that his country would take technical military measures and
retaliatory measures to confront threats to its national security as a result of Finland's accession to NATO.
Moscow’s agitation
According to experts, Finland's accession to NATO provokes
Moscow, as the former falls within Russia's economic and security sphere of
influence, which represents a challenge to Russian influence in the region, as
the West is now able to threaten the Russian depth thanks to the Finnish
artillery, which is considered the most powerful in the world. The step also
blocks Russia in its sphere of influence in the Arctic, where Russia has become
the only non-NATO member among the countries that claim Arctic lands, which
heralds the outbreak of a direct military confrontation with NATO, reminding
the world of the tragedies of the First and Second World Wars.
Political charging
Dr. Basel Haj Jasem, a researcher of Russian-European
affairs, said that there are 11,405 nuclear warheads in the possession of both
Russia and the United States, and Russia is highly politically charged due to
Finland now coming under the umbrella of NATO, while Washington refuses to stop
taking expansionary steps to the borders of the alliance and its defensive and
offensive umbrella and supporting the missile arsenal of NATO countries.
Jasem added in a statement to the Reference that Finland's
accession may be a way to ignite a third world war or a limited global
confrontation, since the step came at a time characterized by intense Russian
motivation towards Moscow's national security with the expansion of the Western
presence of NATO countries near the borders. He pointed out that Finland's
accession to NATO not only doubled the alliance's common borders with Russia,
but also constituted a strategic and political setback for Russian President
Vladimir Putin, who has long complained about the alliance's eastward
expansionist policy, as NATO has encircled the Russian Kola Peninsula, which is
a strategic area located 110 miles east of the border, where Russia maintains
ballistic missiles and stores nuclear warheads, in addition to controlling the
Baltic Sea near Russia's ancient capital, St. Petersburg.
Jasem emphasized that Russia is trying to find a solution to
curb the new threat map represented by the besiege of its borders by countries
that owe subordination and protection to NATO, and therefore its most recent
move was in Belarus, seeking to deploy nuclear and tactical missile systems,
most notably the Iskander system.
Jasem stressed that the Russian forces' training of their
Belarusian counterparts since April 3 on these nuclear weapons and tactical
missiles stems from a complete Russian conviction that Finland's accession to
NATO will not be the last step, as Sweden is on the way after Washington
removed many obstacles in the way of its accession. Russia needs to strengthen
its military defenses in the northwest and western part of its Arctic coast,
and it also needs to strengthen the air defense systems in the northwest of the
country to counter any possible air or missile attacks emanating from Finland.
Russian President Vladimir Putin had announced his country's
interest in the Arctic, as he decided to allocate a large percentage of 10% of
Russian government investments in the region, due to the fact that a fifth of
Russian lands and about 90% of its future hydrocarbon reserves lie within the
Arctic Circle, in addition to the presence of two million Russians living
there, which is more than half of the world's population in this region.
With nearly 22% of Russia's GDP derived from the oil and gas
fields above the Arctic Circle, the cold North is an integral part of the
fabric of Russian culture and a symbol of their historical ambitions to reach
the northernmost point of the world. This is especially the case since the ice
has begun to melt in the Arctic, which makes the huge reserves of oil and gas
lurking under the ocean floor usable, amounting to about 26% of the earth’s
undiscovered resource reserves. All of this opens the doors wide for the
development of events in the near future that put
the entire world in front of a new era and on the verge of a world war.