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Foreign relations of Finland

The foreign relations of Finland are the responsibility of the president of Finland, who leads foreign policy in cooperation with the government. Implicitly the government is responsible for internal policy and decision making in the European Union. Within the government, preparative discussions are conducted in the government committee of foreign and security policy (ulko- ja turvallisuuspoliittinen ministerivaliokunta), which includes the Prime Minister and at least the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Minister of Defence, and at most four other ministers as necessary.[1] The committee meets with the President as necessary. Laws concerning foreign relations are discussed in the parliamentary committee of foreign relations (ulkoasiainvaliokunta, utrikesutskottet). The Ministry of Foreign Affairs implements the foreign policy.

Embassy of Finland to the United States in Washington D.C.

During the Cold War, Finland's foreign policy was based on official neutrality between the Western powers and the Soviet Union, while simultaneously stressing Nordic cooperation in the framework of the Nordic Council and cautious economic integration with the West as promoted by the Bretton-Woods Agreement and the free trade treaty with the European Economic Community. Finland shares this history with close neighbour Sweden, which Finland was a part of until the split of the Swedish empire in 1809. Finland did not join the Soviet Union's economic sphere (Comecon) but remained a free-market economy and conducted bilateral trade with the Soviet Union. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Finland unilaterally abrogated the last restrictions imposed on it by the Paris peace treaties of 1947 and the Finno-Soviet Agreement of Friendship, Cooperation, and Mutual Assistance. The government filed an application for membership in the European Union (EU) three months after the dissolution of the Soviet Union and became a member in 1995. Finland did not attempt to join NATO, even though post-Soviet countries on the Baltic Sea and elsewhere joined. Nevertheless, defence policymakers have quietly converted to NATO equipment and contributed troops.

President Martti Ahtisaari and the coalition governments led Finland closer to the core EU in the late 1990s. Finland was considered a cooperative model state, and Finland did not oppose proposals for a common EU defence policy.[2] This was reversed in the 2000s, when Tarja Halonen and Erkki Tuomioja made Finland's official policy to resist other EU members' plans for common defense.[2] However, Halonen allowed Finland to join European Union Battlegroups in 2006 and the NATO Response Force in 2008.

Relations with Russia are cordial and common issues include bureaucracy (particularly at the Vaalimaa border crossing), airspace violations, development aid Finland gives to Russia (especially in environmental problems that affect Finland), and Finland's energy dependency on Russian gas and electricity. Behind the scenes, the administration witnessed a resurrection of Soviet-era tactics as recently as 2017. The Finnish Security Intelligence Service, the nation's security agency, says the known number of Russian agents from Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) and GRU now exceeds Cold War levels and there are unknown numbers of others.[3] Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in March 2022 that her government would have to respond if Finland became a NATO member.[4]

As of March 2011 Finland maintains diplomatic relations with all UN member states.[5]

All NATO countries approved Finland's accession to the military alliance by April 1, 2023, and it officially joined on April 4. The move was the final process in Finland's transition from conducting a foreign policy of neutrality to clearly standing as an official part of the Western bloc.

History

 
President of Latvia Jānis Čakste and President of Finland Lauri Kristian Relander during Relander's 1926 official visit to Latvia. In the background, the Foreign Minister of Finland Eemil Nestor Setälä to the right.
 
After the Second World War, J. K Paasikivi (in the middle), the 7th President of Finland, was remembered as a main architect of Finland's foreign policy, especially with the Soviet Union.[6]
 
Yugoslavian President Josip Broz Tito with the Finnish president Urho Kekkonen in Helsinki 1964
 
Finnish President Sauli Niinistö with Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2016
 
Finnish President Niinistö with US President Donald Trump in 2017

After independence from Russia in 1917, the Finnish Civil War, including interventions by Imperial Germany and Soviet Russia, and failure of the Communist revolution, resulted in the official ban on Communism, and strengthening relations with Western countries. Overt alliance with Germany was not possible due to the result of the First World War, but in general the period of 1918 to 1939 was characterised by economic growth and increasing integration to the Western world economy. Relations with Soviet Russia from 1918 to 1939 were icy; voluntary expeditions to Russia called heimosodat ended only in 1922, four years after the conclusion of the Finnish Civil War. However, attempts to establish military alliances were unsuccessful.[7] Thus, when the Winter War broke out, Finland was left alone to resist the Soviet attack. Later, during the Continuation War, Finland declared "co-belligerency" with Nazi Germany, and allowed Northern Finland to be used as a German attack base. For 872 days, the German army, aided indirectly by Finnish forces, besieged Leningrad, the Soviet Union's second-largest city.[8] The peace settlement in 1944 with the Soviet Union led to the Lapland War in 1945, where Finland fought Germans in northern Finland.

From the end of the Continuation War with the Soviet Union in 1944 until 1991, the policy was to avoid superpower conflicts and to build mutual confidence with the Western powers and the Soviet Union. Although the country was culturally, socially, and politically Western, Finns realised they had to live in peace with the Soviets and so could take no action that might be interpreted as a security threat. The dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 opened up dramatic new possibilities for Finland and has resulted in the Finns actively seeking greater participation in Western political and economic structures. The popular support for the strictly self-defensive doctrine remains.[9]

2000 constitution

In the 2000 constitution, where diverse constitutional laws were unified into one statute, the leading role of the President was slightly moderated. However, because the constitution still stipulates only that the President leads foreign policy and the government internal policy, the responsibility over European Union affairs is not explicitly resolved. Implicitly this belongs to the powers of the government. In a cohabitation situation as with Matti Vanhanen's recent second government right-wing government and left-wing President Tarja Halonen, there can be friction between government ministers and the president.

The arrangement has been criticised by Risto E. J. Penttilä for not providing a simple answer of who's in charge.[2]

Multilateral relations

Finnish foreign policy emphasises its participation in multilateral organisations. Finland joined the United Nations in 1955 and the European Union in 1995. As noted, the country also is a member of NATO's Partnership for Peace as well as an observer in the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council. The military has been prepared to be more compatible with NATO, as co-operation with NATO in peacekeeping is needed, but military alliance does not have popular support. Political scientist Teija Tiilikainen has attributed tensions like this one to the importance that Finland's political identity places on sovereignty and the (sometimes competing) stress it places on international cooperation.[10]

In the European Union, Finland is a member of the Eurozone, and in addition, the Schengen treaty abolishing passport controls. 60% of foreign trade is to the EU. Other large trade partners are Russia and the United States.

Finland is well represented in the UN civil service in proportion to its population and belongs to several of its specialised and related agencies. Finnish troops have participated in United Nations peacekeeping activities since 1956, and the Finns continue to be one of the largest per capita contributors of peacekeepers in the world. Finland is an active participant in the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and in early 1995 assumed the co-chairmanship of the OSCE's Minsk Group on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Cooperation with the other Scandinavian countries also is important to Finland, and it has been a member of the Nordic Council since 1955. Under the council's auspices, the Nordic countries have created a common labor market and have abolished immigration controls among themselves. The council also serves to coordinate social and cultural policies of the participating countries and has promoted increased cooperation in many fields.

In addition to the organisations already mentioned, Finland is a member of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the International Monetary Fund, the World Trade Organization, the International Finance Corporation, the International Development Association, the Bank for International Settlements, the Asian Development Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, the Council of Europe, and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Finland has moved steadily towards integration into Western institutions and abandoned its formal policy of neutrality, which has been recast as a policy of military nonalliance coupled with the maintenance of a credible, independent defence. Finland's 1994 decision to buy 64 F-18 Hornet fighter planes from the United States signalled the abandonment of the country's policy of balanced arms purchases from Communist countries and Western countries.

In 1994, Finland joined NATO's Partnership for Peace; the country is also an observer in the North Atlantic Cooperation Council. Finland became a full member of the EU in January 1995, at the same time acquiring observer status in the EU's defence arm, the Western European Union.

In 2003, Anneli Jäätteenmäki of the Centre Party won the elections after she had accused her rival Paavo Lipponen, who was prime minister at the time, of allying neutral Finland with the United States in the war in Iraq during a meeting with President George W. Bush, and thus associated Finland with what many Finns considered an illegal war of aggression. Lipponen denied the claims and declared that "We support the UN and the UN Secretary-General." Jäätteenmäki resigned as prime minister after 63 days in office amid accusations that she had lied about the leak of the documents about the meeting between Bush and Lipponen. This series of events was considered scandalous and it is named Iraq leak or Iraq-gate.[11]

Generally, Finland has abided by the principle of neutrality and has good relations with nearly all countries, as evidenced by the freedom of travel that a Finnish passport gives; though relations with Russia remain strained and are often tense due to past historical grievances, including Russian threats and past invasion.[12]

Diplomatic relations list

 
Diplomatic relations of Finland

Finland has established diplomatic relations with all United Nations member states, plus the Holy See and Kosovo.[13]

# Country Date[13]
1   Sweden 10 January 1918
1   Denmark 10 January 1918
3   Norway 6 April 191810 June 1940
October 1945
4   Argentina 11 May 1918[14]
5   Japan 24 May 191822 September 1944
8 March 1957
6   Austria 19 July 191812 March 1938
29 March 1949
6   Bulgaria 19 July 191820 September 1944
4 June 1948
8   Netherlands 14 August 1918
9   Spain 16 August 1918
10   Greece 1 March 1919
11   Poland 8 March 1919[15]24 June 1941
October 1945
12   France 191924 June 1940
October 1945
13   United Kingdom 28 March 19191 August 1941
15 September 1945
14   United States 30 May 191930 June 1944
18 August 1945
15   Belgium 9 July 1919
16   Italy 6 September 1919
17   Portugal 10 January 1920
18   Romania 28 June 192020 September 1944
14 October 1949
19   Russia 31 December 192029 November 1939
31 December 194029 November 1941
6 August 1945 (as Soviet Union)
20   Luxembourg 24 October 1921
21   Hungary 12 April 192220 September 1944
3 October 1947
22   Turkey 9 December 1924[16]
23   Switzerland 29 January 1926
24   Serbia 1928 (as Yugoslavia)[17]
25   Brazil 8 April 1929
26   Afghanistan 15 December 1930
11 May 1956
27   Chile 20 February 1931
28   Iran 12 December 1931[18]
29   Uruguay 21 March 1935
30   Mexico 2 October 1936
   Holy See 31 July 1942[19]
31   Egypt 15 February 1947
32   Iceland 15 August 1947
33   Canada 21 November 1947
34   South Africa 15 May 1949
35   Australia 31 May 1949
36   India 10 September 1949
37   New Zealand 22 July 1950
38   China 28 October 1950
39   Israel 14 November 1950
40   Pakistan 12 January 1951
41   Syria 22 May 1953
42   Colombia 26 March 1954
43   Venezuela 31 March 1954
44   Myanmar 21 June 1954
45   Thailand 21 June 1954
46   Indonesia 6 September 1954
47   Sri Lanka 24 September 1954
48   Philippines 14 July 1955
49   Lebanon 21 June 1956
50   Albania 8 June 1956
51   Cuba 23 January 1959
52   Iraq 15 May 1959
53   Ethiopia 17 July 1959
54   Morocco 17 July 1959
55   Tunisia 17 July 1959
56   Jordan 28 November 1959
57   Cameroon 15 January 1960
58   Chad 12 August 1960
59   Mali 7 October 1960
60   Sudan 27 January 1961
61   Guinea 19 July 1961
62   Cyprus 2 September 1961
63   Ireland 2 November 1961
64   Algeria 18 January 1963
65   Nigeria 18 January 1963
66   Peru 29 March 1963
67   Mongolia 8 July 1963
68   Bolivia 21 September 1963
69   Paraguay 20 November 1963
70   Ivory Coast 18 June 1964
71   Malawi 13 July 1964
72   Ecuador 5 February 1965
73   Kenya 14 June 1965
74   Tanzania 14 June 1965
75   Uganda 14 June 1965
76   Libya 28 September 1965
77   Costa Rica 23 August 1966
78   Haiti 29 September 1966
79   Republic of the Congo 22 March 1967
80   El Salvador 14 April 1967
81   Guatemala 18 August 1967
82   Zambia 8 March 1968
83   Senegal 31 January 1969
84   Kuwait 21 February 1969
85   Malta 21 February 1969
86   Saudi Arabia 6 June 1969
87   Cambodia 20 January 1970
9 August 1976
88   Liberia 24 March 1970
89   Democratic Republic of the Congo 3 April 1970
90   Central African Republic 22 May 1970
91   Somalia 12 March 1971
92   Trinidad and Tobago 17 December 1971
93   Bangladesh 5 May 1972
94   Malaysia 17 November 1972
95   Germany 7 January 1973
96   Vietnam 25 January 1973
97   Singapore 7 February 1973
98   Oman 1 April 1973
99   North Korea 1 June 1973
100   South Korea 24 August 1973
101   Mauritius 31 October 1973
102   Qatar 1 April 1974
103   Guinea-Bissau 9 August 1974
104     Nepal 21 September 1974
105   Bahrain 20 December 1974
106   Laos 1 January 1975
107   Panama 1 January 1975
108   United Arab Emirates 21 February 1975
109   Mozambique 18 July 1975
110   Niger 28 November 1975
111   Nicaragua 22 December 1975
112   Honduras 30 January 1976
113   Angola 18 September 1976
114   Madagascar 1 June 1977
115   Papua New Guinea 31 September 1977
116   Barbados 1 December 1977
117   Fiji 1 December 1977
118   Ghana 1 December 1977
119   Jamaica 1 December 1977
120   Comoros 19 December 1977
121   Botswana 1 July 1978
122   Lesotho 1 February 1979
123   Mauritania 1 March 1979
124   São Tomé and Príncipe 1 March 1979
125   Guyana 2 April 1979
126   Yemen 1 June 1979
127   Kiribati 24 August 1979
128   Burundi 1 January 1980
129   Burkina Faso 15 February 1980
130   Grenada 1 June 1980
131   Vanuatu 31 July 1980
132   Zimbabwe 1 August 1980
133   Rwanda 1 June 1983
134   Cape Verde 22 July 1983
135   Dominican Republic 2 January 1984
136   Maldives 10 August 1984
137   Bhutan 1 May 1986
138   Seychelles 1 April 1987
139   Gabon 20 May 1988
140   Gambia 1 September 1988
141   Brunei 11 November 1988
142   Benin 22 December 1988
143   Namibia 21 March 1990
144   Eswatini 20 September 1990
145   Estonia 7 June 1920June 1940
29 August 1991
146   Latvia 16 January 1921June 1940
29 August 1991
147   Lithuania 14 October 1921June 1940
29 August 1991
148   Slovenia 17 February 1992
149   Croatia 19 February 1992
150   Belarus 26 February 1992
151   Moldova 26 February 1992
152   Tajikistan 26 February 1992
153   Ukraine 26 February 1992
154   Uzbekistan 26 February 1992
155   Kyrgyzstan 23 March 1992
156   Azerbaijan 24 March 1992
157   Armenia 25 March 1992
158   Kazakhstan 13 May 1992
159   Turkmenistan 11 June 1992
160   Liechtenstein 26 June 1992
161   Georgia 8 July 1992
162   Czech Republic 1 January 1993
163   Slovakia 1 January 1993
164   Eritrea 28 May 1993
165   Tonga 1 December 1993
166   North Macedonia 17 December 1993
167   Marshall Islands 26 December 1993
168   Bosnia and Herzegovina 29 December 1994
169   Andorra 17 July 1995
170   San Marino 17 July 1995
171   Belize 19 June 1997
172   Solomon Islands 16 July 1999
173   Samoa 11 August 1999
174   East Timor 20 June 2002
175   Suriname 28 June 2005
176   Bahamas 2 December 2005
177   Montenegro 12 June 2006
178   Djibouti 14 March 2007
179   Monaco 29 March 2007
180   Equatorial Guinea 30 April 2008
181   Sierra Leone 17 June 2008
182   Antigua and Barbuda 26 September 2008
  Kosovo 3 February 2009
183   Tuvalu 6 March 2009
184   Nauru 24 March 2009
185   Palau 5 May 2009
186   Dominica 19 August 2009
187   Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 11 September 2009
188   Saint Kitts and Nevis 22 September 2009
189   Saint Lucia 22 September 2009
190   Federated States of Micronesia 4 May 2010
191   Togo 12 May 2010
192   South Sudan 29 June 2012[20]

Multilateral

Organization Formal Relations Began Notes
  Nordic Council 1955
 
Former Prime Minister of Finland Jyrki Katainen in Nordic Council back in 2011


  European Union 1995 See 1995 enlargement of the European Union
 
Minister Sanna Marin and President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen meeting in Helsinki 3.2.2022
  NATO 2023 See Finland–NATO relations
 
The Finnish ambassador hands the NATO membership application to Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg

Africa

Country Formal Relations Began Notes
  Algeria 18 January 1963
  • Algeria has an embassy in Helsinki.
  • Finland has an embassy in Algiers.
  Angola 18 September 1976
  • Angola is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
  • Finland is represented in Angola through its embassy in Maputo, Mozambique.
  • Finland also has an honorary consulate in Luanda.
  Botswana 1 July 1978
  • Botswana is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
  • Finland is represented in Botswana through its embassy in Pretoria, South Africa.
  • Finland has an honorary consulate in Gaborone.
  Burkina Faso 1 July 1978
  • Burkina Faso is represented in Finland through its embassy in Copenhagen, Denmark.
  Burundi 1 January 1980
  • Burundi is represented in Finland through its embassy in Oslo, Norway.
  • Finland is represented in Burundi through its embassy in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
  Comoros

Comoros is represented in Finland by its embassy in Paris, France.[21]

  Djibouti 14 March 2007
  Egypt 15 February 1947
  • Finland recognised Egypt on February 15, 1947.
  • Egypt has an embassy in Helsinki.
  • Finland has an embassy in Cairo.
  Ethiopia July 17, 1959 See Ethiopia–Finland relations

Ethiopia is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden. Finland has an embassy in Addis Ababa. Ethiopia is one of Finland's long-term development partners and in the water and education sectors.[24] On April 29, 2009, the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development announced that the Finnish government had made a grant of 11.4 million euros to enable the Benishangul-Gumuz Region to upgrade its capacity to plan and manage its rural water supply and sanitation program to achieve universal access for all Ethiopians.[25]

      Kenya 14 June 1965
    • Finland recognised Kenya on December 13, 1963.
    • Kenya is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Finland has an embassy in Nairobi and an honorary consulate in Mombasa.
    • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: relations with Kenya
      Morocco 17 July 1959
    • Finland recognised Morocco's independence on June 8, 1956.
    • Finland has an embassy in Rabat, an honorary consulate general in Casablanca, and other honorary consulates in Agadir, Kenitra, Marrakech, Safi, and Tangiers.[26]
    • Morocco has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: relations with Morocco
      Mozambique 18 July 1975
    • Finland recognised Mozambique on July 4, 1975.
    • Mozambique is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Finland has an embassy in Maputo.
      Namibia 21 March 1990 See Finland–Namibia relations

    Finland recognised Namibia on March 21, 1990. Both countries established diplomatic relations on the same day. Namibia is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden. Finland has an embassy in Windhoek and an honorary consulate in Walvis Bay.

      South Africa 15 May 1949 See Finland – South Africa relations

    A South African legation was established in 1967 and relations were then upgraded to ambassadorial level in March 1991.[27] Finland has an embassy in Pretoria, a general consulate in Johannesburg, and a consulate in Cape Town. South Africa is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden. During World War II South Africa declared war on Finland.[28]

    Finland was a strong supporter of the dismantling of Apartheid in South Africa.[28][29][30]

    South African exports to Finland include fresh and dried fruits, wine, pulp, paper, iron, steel, and coal. South Africa imports telecommunication equipment, paper, board products, and machinery from Finland.[27]

    • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: relations with South Africa
    • South African Department of Foreign Affairs: relations with Finland
      Tanzania 14 June 1965
    • Finland recognised Tanganyika on December 9, 1961.
    • Tanzania is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Finland has an embassy in Dar es Salaam.
    • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: relations with Tanzania
      Tunisia 17 July 1959
    • Finland recognised Tunisia's independence on June 8, 1956.
    • Since 1994 Finland has an embassy in Tunis. Previously Finland was represented in Tunisia through its embassies in Algiers, Algeria, and Rome, Italy.[31]
    • Tunisia has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: relations with Tunisia
      Zambia 8 March 1968
    • Finland recognised Zambia on October 29, 1964.
    • Zambia is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Finland has an embassy in Lusaka.
    • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: relations with Zambia

    Americas

    Country Formal Relations Began Notes
      Antigua and Barbuda 26 September 2008
    • Finland's embassy in Mexico City, Mexico attends to consular matters relating to Antigua and Barbuda.
      Argentina 11 May 1918 See Argentina–Finland relations
      Bahamas 2 December 2005
    • Finland's embassy in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada attends to consular matters relating to The Bahamas.
    • Finland also has an honorary consulate in Nassau.
      Barbados 1 December 1977
    • Barbados is represented in Finland by their embassy in Brussels, Belgium.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate general in Christ Church.
      Belize 19 June 1997
    • Finland's embassy in Mexico City, Mexico attends to consular matters relating to Belize.
    • Finland also has an honorary consulate in Belize City.
      Bolivia 21 September 1963
    • Bolivia is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Finland is accredited to Bolivia from its embassy in Lima, Peru.
      Brazil 1929 See Brazil–Finland relations
     
    President Tarja Halonen together with Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the President of Brazil in Helsinki 2007
    • Brazil has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Finland has an embassy in Brasília.
      Canada 21 November 1947 See Canada–Finland relations
     
    Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
    • Canada has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Finland has an embassy in Ottawa.
      Chile 17 June 1919 See Chile–Finland relations

    Chile recognised Finland's independence on June 17, 1919. Diplomatic relations between them were established in 1931 and have been continuously maintained, despite pressures at times to discontinue them.[34] The two countries maintain resident ambassadors in both capitals.[34]

    • Chile has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Finland has an embassy in Santiago.
      Colombia 26 May 1954
    • Colombia has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Finland has an embassy in Bogotá.

    The relations between Colombia and Finland are harmonious as both countries share a similar ideology based on democracy, human rights and a lasting peace. It's because of this that Colombia has decided to open an embassy in Helsinki. Colombia also defines Finland as a key player on Colombia's accession into the OECD and the ratification of the Colombia-European Union Trade Agreement.[35]

      Costa Rica 23 August 1966
    • Costa Rica is represent in Finland by their embassy in Oslo, Norway.
    • Finland's embassy in Mexico City, Mexico attends to consular matters relating to Costa Rica.
    • Finland also has an honorary consulate general and honorary vice-consulate in San José.
      Cuba 23 January 1959
    • Cuba has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Finland's embassy in Mexico City, Mexico attends to consular matters relating to Cuba.
    • Finland also has an honorary consulate general in Havana.
      Dominica 18 August 2009
    • Finland has an honorary consulate in Roseau.
      Dominican Republic 2 January 1984
    • The Dominican Republic is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate general in Santo Domingo.
      Ecuador 5 February 1965
    • Ecuador is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Finland's embassy in Lima, Peru attends to consular matters relating to Ecuador.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate in Guayaquil and Quito.
      El Salvador 14 April 1967
    • El Salvador is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Finland's embassy in Mexico City, Mexico attends to consular matters relating to El Salvador.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate and an honorary vice-consulate in San Salvador.
      Grenada 1 June 1980
    • Grenada is represented in Finland by their embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate in St. George's.
      Guatemala 18 August 1967
    • Guatemala is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Brussels, Belgium.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate in Guatemala City.
      Guyana 2 April 1979
    • Both countries established diplomatic relations on April 2, 1979.[36]
    • Guyana is represented in Finland by their embassy in Brussels, Belgium.
    • Finland also has an honorary consulate general in Georgetown.
      Haiti 29 September 1966
    • Finland's embassy in Mexico City, Mexico attends to consular matters relating to Haiti.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate general in Port-au-Prince.
      Honduras 30 January 1976
    • Honduras is represented in Finland by their embassy in Brussels, Belgium.
    • Finland's embassy in Mexico City, Mexico attends to consular matters relating to Honduras.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate general in Tegucigalpa and an honorary consulate in San Pedro Sula.
      Jamaica 1 December 1977
    • Jamaica is represented in Finland by their embassy in London, United Kingdom.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate general in Kingston.
      Mexico 2 October 1936 See Finland–Mexico relations
     
    President Sauli Niinistö meeting with President Enrique Peña Nieto in 2015

    Mexico recognized the independence of Finland in July 1920.

    • Finland has an embassy in Mexico City.[37]
    • Mexico has an embassy in Helsinki.[38]
    • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: Relations with Mexico
      Nicaragua 22 December 1975 See Finland–Nicaragua relations
    • Finland is accredited to Nicaragua from its embassy in Mexico City, Mexico.[39]
    • Nicaragua has an honorary consulate in Helsinki.[40]
      Panama 1 December 1975
    • Panama is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Finland's embassy in Bogota, Colombia attends to consular matters relating to Panama.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate general in Panama City.
      Paraguay 20 November 1963
    • Paraguay is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Finland's embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina attends to consular matters relating to Paraguay.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate in Asunción.
      Peru 29 March 1963
    • Peru has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Finland has an embassy in Lima.
      Saint Kitts and Nevis 22 September 2009
      Saint Lucia 22 September 2009
    • Finland has an honorary consulate in Castries.
      Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 30 January 1976
    • Finland is represented in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines through a roving ambassador.[41]
    • Finland has an honorary consulate in Kingstown.[42]
    • Saint Vincent and the Grenadines is represented in Finland through it embassy in London.[43]
      Suriname 28 June 2005
    • Finland's embassy in Brasília, Brazil attends to consular matters relating to Suriname.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate in Paramaribo.
      Trinidad and Tobago 17 December 1971
    • Trinidad and Tobago is accredited to Finland from its embassy in London, United Kingdom.
    • Finland has an honorary consulate general in Barataria.
      United States 30 May 1919[44] See Finland–United States relations
     
    President Ronald Reagan meeting with President Mauno Koivisto in 1988
     
    President Donald J. Trump with President Sauli Niinistö of Finland at the Mäntyniemi Residence, July 16, 2018

    5-25-1988 President Reagan meeting with President Mauno Henrik Koivisto during a trip to Finland at the Helsinki airport in Vantaa Relations between the United States and Finland are warm. Some 200,000 US citizens visit Finland annually, and about 3,000 US citizens are resident there. The US has an educational exchange program in Finland that is comparatively large for a Western European country of Finland's size. It is financed in part from a trust fund established in 1976 from Finland's final repayment of a US loan made in the aftermath of World War I.

    Finland is bordered on the east by Russia and, as one of the former Soviet Union's neighbours, has been of particular interest and importance to the US both during the Cold War and in its aftermath. Before the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991, longstanding US policy was to support Finnish neutrality and to maintain and reinforce Finland's historic, cultural, and economic ties with the West. The US has welcomed Finland's increased participation since 1991 in Western economic and political structures.

    Economic and trade relations between Finland and the United States are active and were bolstered by the F-18 purchase. US-Finland trade totals almost $5 billion annually. The US receives about 7% of Finland's exports – mainly wood pulp and paper, ships, machinery, electronics and instruments and refined petroleum products[45] – and provides about 7% of its imports – principally computers, semiconductors, aircraft, and machinery.

      Uruguay 21 March 1935 See Finland–Uruguay relations
    • Finland's embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina accredited to Uruguay and maintains an honorary consulate in Montevideo.
    • Uruguay has an embassy in Helsinki.
      Venezuela 31 March 1954
    • Finland is accredited to Venezuela from its embassy in Bogotá, Colombia.
    • Venezuela is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Oslo, Norway.

    Asia

    Country Formal Relations Began Notes
      Afghanistan 11 May 1956
    • Afghanistan recognised the independence of Finland on July 17, 1928.
    • Afghanistan is accredited to Finland through its embassy in Oslo, Norway.[46]
    • Finland opened a liaison office in Kabul in 2002. It converted into an embassy on January 1, 2006.[47]
    • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: relations with Afghanistan
      Armenia 25 March 1992 See Armenia–Finland relations
    • Finland recognised Armenia on December 30, 1991.
    • Armenia is represented in Finland by a non-resident ambassador (based in Yerevan at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs).
    • Finland is represented in Armenia by a non-resident ambassador (based in Helsinki at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs) and an honorary consulate in Yerevan.
    • Both countries are full members of the Council of Europe.
    • Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs: relations with Armenia
      Azerbaijan 24 March 1992 See Azerbaijan–Finland relations
    • Finland recognised Azerbaijan on March 24, 1992.
    • Azerbaijan is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm (Sweden) and an honorary consulate in Helsinki.
    • Finland is represented in Azerbaijan by a non-resident ambassador (based in Helsinki at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs) and an honorary consulate in Baku.
    • Both countries are full members of the Council of Europe.
      Cambodia 20 January 1970[48]
     
    Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Prime Minister Hun Sen
    • Finland recognized Cambodia on 19 December 1969. Diplomatic relations established on 20 January 1970, re-established 9 August 1976.[48]
    • Cambodia is represented in Finland through its embassy in London, England[49]
    • Finland is represented in Cambodia through its embassy in Bangkok, Thailand[50]
      China October 28, 1950[51] See China–Finland relations

    The two international trade organisations are the Finland-China Trade Association and the China Council for Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT). One of the fastest growing areas of trade between the two countries is in environmental protection. and information technology. Nokia is the largest Finnish investor in China.

      Georgia 8 July 1992 See Finland–Georgia relations
     
    President Sauli Niinistö with President of Georgia Salome Zourabichvili in 2019
    • Finland recognised Georgia on March 27, 1992.
    • Finland is represented in Georgia by a non-resident ambassador (based in Helsinki at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs) and an honorary consulate in Tbilisi.
    • Georgia is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm (Sweden) and an honorary consulate in Helsinki.
    • Both countries are full members of the Council of Europe.
    • On April 22, 2009, the Georgian Foreign Minister visited Finland.[52]
    • Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs: relations with Georgia
      India 10 September 1949 See Finland–India relations
     
    The Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh and the Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen in Helsinki on 2006.
    • Finland has an embassy in New Delhi and three honorary consulates in Kolkata, Chennai, and Mumbai.
    • India has an embassy in Helsinki.[53]
    • Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs: relations with India
      Indonesia 6 September 1954
    • Finland recognised the independence of Indonesia on February 10, 1950.
    • Finland has an embassy in Jakarta and honorary consulates in Denpasar and Medan.[54]
    • Indonesia has an embassy in Helsinki.[55]
      Iran See Finland–Iran relations
     
    Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and the Farah Pahlavi visit to Espoo, Finland. To their right, the Finnish president Urho Kekkonen in 1970

    Photograph of the Shah and the Shahbanu during their visit to Tapiola residencial area in Espoo, Finland. To their right, the Finnish president Urho Kekkonen.

    • Finland has an embassy in Tehran.[56]
    • Iran has an embassy in Helsinki.[57]
      Iraq 15 May 1959
    • Finland recognised Iraq on May 15, 1959.
    • Finland has an embassy in Baghdad.
    • Iraq has an embassy in Helsinki.
      Israel 14 November 1950 See Finland–Israel relations
      Japan 6 September 1919 See Finland–Japan relations
    • Japan recognised Finland on May 23, 1919.
    • Finland has an embassy in Tokyo and honorary consulate general in Osaka and other honorary consulates in Kitakyushu, Nagano, Nagoya, and Sapporo.
    • Japan has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs: relations with Japan
    • Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs: relations with Finland
      Kazakhstan 13 May 1992[60]

    See Finland–Kazakhstan relations

    • Finland recognized Kazakhstan upon its independence from the Soviet Union.
    • Finland has an embassy in Nur-Sultan.
    • Kazakhstan has an embassy in Helsinki.
      Malaysia 17 November 1972[61] See Finland–Malaysia relations
        Nepal 30 August 1955
    • Finland recognised Nepal on December 14, 1955.
    • Finland has an embassy in Kathmandu.
    • Nepal is represented in Finland through its embassy in Copenhagen, Denmark.
    • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: relations with Nepal
      North Korea 1 June 1973[64] See Finland–North Korea relations
    • Finland recognized the People's Democratic Republic of Korea on April 13, 1973.[65]
    • Finland condemns North Korean nuclear tests and fully agrees with EU foreign policy statements on this matter.[65]
    • International trade has been irregular and sporadic, and it is controlled by UN and EU sanctions.[66]
    • Finland has contributed to humanitarian assistance to North Korea through the Red Cross and the World Food Programme.[66]
    • Neither Finland nor North Korea currently have resident ambassadors. North Korea is represented by the North Korean embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.[66] Finland is represented by the Finnish embassy in Seoul, South Korea.[67]
      Northern Cyprus Northern Cyprus has a Representative Office in Helsinki.[68]
      Pakistan January 12, 1951 See Finland–Pakistan relations
    • Finland is accredited to Pakistan from its Ministry of Foreign Affairs based in Helsinki.
    • Pakistan is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
      Saudi Arabia 23 September 1969
    • Finland has an embassy in Riyadh and an honorary consulate general in Jeddah.[69]
    • Saudi Arabia will open an embassy in Helsinki.[70]
      South Korea 24 August 1973
    • The establishment of diplomatic relations between the Republic of Finland and the South Korea began on 1973-08-24.
    • Finland recognised South Korea on April 13, 1973.
    • Finland has an embassy in Seoul.[71]
    • South Korea has an embassy in Helsinki.[72]
      Syria 22 May 1953
    • Finland has an embassy in Damascus and two honorary consulates general in Aleppo and Latakia.
    • Syria is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.[73]
      Thailand 21 June 1954
    • Thailand, previously known as Siam, recognised Finland's independence on October 9, 1919.[74]
    • Siam was the second non-European state after the United States and the first Asian state to recognise Finland's independence.
    • Finland has an embassy in Bangkok, its honorary consulate general in Phuket and its honorary consulate in Chiang Mai.[75]
    • Thailand has an embassy in Helsinki.[76]
    • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: relations with Thailand
      Turkey 20 May 1920 See Finland–Turkey relations
    • Turkey recognised the independence of Finland on February 21, 1918.
    • Finland has an embassy in Ankara and an honorary consulate general in Istanbul and other honorary consulates in Belek, Bodrum and Izmir.[77]
    • Turkey has an embassy in Helsinki.[78]
    • Finland is an EU member and Turkey is an candidate.
    • Turkey and Finland are NATO members.
    • See also Turks in Finland
    • Turkey's Ministry of Foreign Affairs: political, economic and commercial relations with Finland
    • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: relations with Turkey
      United Arab Emirates 21 February 1975 See Finland–United Arab Emirates relations
    • Finland recognised United Arab Emirates on February 21, 1975.
    • Finland has an embassy in Abu Dhabi.
    • United Arab Emirates has an embassy in Helsinki.
      Vietnam 5 January 1973
    • Finland recognised Vietnam on December 28, 1972.
    • Finland has an embassy in Hanoi and an honorary consulate in Ho Chi Minh City.
    • Vietnam has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland about Vietnam

    Europe

    Country Formal Relations Began Notes
      Albania 8 June 1956
     
    Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama
    • Albania is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
    • Finland is accredited to Albania from its embassy in Athens, Greece.
    • Albania is an EU candidate and Finland is an member.
    • Albania supports Finland's NATO membership.
      Austria 29 March 1949 See Austria–Finland relations
     
    Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin and President of Austria Alexander Van der Bellen in 2023
      Belgium 9 July 1919
    • Belgium has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Finland has an embassy in Brussels.
    • Both countries are full members of the European Union.
      Bulgaria 5 August 1918 See Bulgaria–Finland relations
    • In 1963, the diplomatic representations of the two countries were upgraded to the level of embassy.
    • Bulgaria has an embassy in Helsinki and an honorary consulate in Kemi.[79]
    • Finland has an embassy in Sofia and an honorary consulate in Varna.[80]
    • Both countries are full members of the European Union.
    • Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs: relations with Bulgaria
      Croatia 19 February 1992 See Croatia–Finland relations
     
    Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic
    • Croatia has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Finland has an embassy in Zagreb.
    • Both countries are full members of the European Union.
      Cyprus 2 September 1961 See Cyprus–Finland relations
    • Finland recognised Cyprus on August 16, 1960.
    • Cyprus has an embassy in Helsinki and an honorary consulate in Vantaa.[81]
    • Finland has an embassy in Nicosia.[82]
    • Both countries are full members of the European Union.
      Czech Republic 1 January 1993
    • Czech Republic has an embassy in Helsinki.
    • Finland has an embassy in Prague.
    • Both countries are full members of the European Union.
      Denmark 18 February 1918 See Denmark–Finland relations
     
    Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Prime Minister of Denmark Mette Frederiksen in 2022

    Denmark and Finland share a long history, where Danish Vikings settled in Finland and made crusades. Both countries were also part of the Kalmar Union.[83] Denmark was the first country along with Sweden to recognize Finland's Independence.

    There are 3,000 Finns living in Denmark, and 1,235 Danes living in Finland. During Winter War, over 1,000 Danish volunteers came to help Finland.[84] During the Winter war and the Continuation war, Denmark took 4,200 Finnish war children.[85] Exports to Denmark value at 1.380 billion euros, and imports from Denmark value at 1.453 billion, making Denmark Finland's 10th largest import-trading partner. The Nordic Culture Fund and the Finnish-Danish Cultural Fund support projects of artists in both countries. Many tourists from Finland visit Denmark, 206,000 in 2017, and vice versa: 113,000 Danish tourists visited Finland in 2017. In 1918 Mannerheim visited Copenhagen, asking if Prince Aage would have wanted to become the King of Finland.

        Estonia 29 August 1991 See Estonia–Finland relations
       
      Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Prime Minister of Estonia Kaja Kallas in 2022

      Finland's main language, Finnish, is related to Estonian, and there is and has been a certain feeling of kinship. 76% of Finns have visited Estonia and in 2004, 1.8 million Finns reported visiting Estonia. Finnish and Swedish investors are the largest foreign investors in Estonia.[86] Finland and Estonia are members of the European Union and the Schengen agreement, freeing international travel and trade between the countries.

      Finland's government recognised Estonia's independence in 1920. In response to the Soviet invasion, diplomatic missions were de facto removed. However, when Estonia declared independence, this "temporary obstruction" was resolved. Both countries restored diplomatic relations on August 29, 1991.

      Finland contributed and continues to contribute military aid to Estonia, e.g., training of officers, provision of equipment.

        France 24 January 1918 See Finland–France relations
        Germany 4 January 1918 See Finland–Germany relations
       
      C.G.E. Mannerheim, Adolf Hitler and Risto Ryti in June 4th 1942 during Hitler's visit in Finland
       
      Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Chancellor Olaf Scholz
        Greece 5 January 1918 See Finland–Greece relations
       
      Prime Minister Sanna Marin with Prime Minister of Greece Kyriakos Mitsotakis in 2022
      • Greece recognised Finland's independence on January 5, 1918.
      • Finland has an embassy in Athens.
      • Greece has an embassy in Helsinki.
      • Both countries are full members of the European Union.
        Hungary 20 May 1947 See Finland–Hungary relations
      • Hungary recognised Finland on August 23, 1920. Finland recognised Hungary on September 10, 1920.
      • Finland broke off diplomatic relations on September 20, 1944.
      • Diplomatic relations were re-established on May 20, 1947.
      • Both national languages, Finnish and Hungarian, are Uralic languages, which has led to cultural exchange albeit at a much smaller scale compared to the third major Uralic-speaking country, Estonia.
      • Finland has an embassy in Budapest and an honorary consulate in Pécs.
      • Hungary has an embassy in Helsinki and four honorary consulates (in Turku, Mariehamn, Tampere and Joensuu).[90]
      • Both countries are full members of the European Union.
      • Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs: relations with Hungary
        Iceland 15 August 1947 See Finland–Iceland relations
       
      Sanna Marin met the Prime Minister of Iceland Katrín Jakobsdóttir in Kesäranta on 2022
      • Finland has an embassy in Reykjavík.[91]
      • Iceland has an embassy in Helsinki.[92]
      • Both countries are full members of the Nordic Council and the Nordic Passport Union, with no border controls or limitations on travel and residence. On cases concerning an individual, authorities must arrange translations between Finnish and Icelandic, if necessary.
        Ireland 2 November 1961
       
      Prime Minister Sanna Marin with Taoiseach, Prime Minister of Ireland Micheál Martin in 2022
        Italy 6 September 1919 See Finland–Italy relations
       
      Finnish President Sauli Niinistö with Italian President Sergio Mattarella
        Kosovo 3 February 2009

      Finland recognised Kosovo March 7, 2008.[97][98] Finland maintains an embassy in Pristina.[99]

        Latvia 24 September 1919 See Finland–Latvia relations
       
      Prime Minister Sanna Marin met Latvia’s Prime Minister Krišjānis Kariņš 12 February 2020
        Lithuania 4 November 1919 See Finland–Lithuania relations
      • Finland recognised Lithuania's independence de facto on November 14, 1919, and de jure on October 14, 1921.
      • Finland has an embassy in Vilnius and an honorary consulate in Klaipėda.
      • Lithuania has an embassy in Helsinki.
      • Both countries are full members of the Council of the Baltic Sea States and of the European Union.
      • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: relations with Lithuania
        Luxembourg 25 October 1921
       
      Sanna Marin and Prime Minister of Luxembourg Xavier Bettel in 2022
        Montenegro 12 July 2006
       
      Sanna Marin met the Prime Minister of Montenegro Dritan Abazović, on 2022
      • Finland recognised Montenegro 29 June 2006.
      • Montenegro supports Finland's NATO membership.
        Netherlands 18 August 1918 See Finland–Netherlands relations
       
      President of Finland Kekkonen with the Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard of Lippe-Biesterfeld on their way to Palace, October 24, 1972
        North Macedonia
       
      Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin with North Makedonian President Stevo Pendarovski in 2022
      • Finland is an EU member and North Macedonia is an candidate.
      • North Macedonia supports Finland's NATO membership.
        Norway 6 April 1918 See Finland–Norway relations
        Poland 8 March 1919 See Finland–Poland relations
       
      Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Prime Minister of Poland Mateusz Morawiecki in 2022
        Portugal 10 January 1920
        Romania 14 October 1949
        Russia 30 December 1991
       

      Relations with Russia are peaceful and friendly. Finland imports a lot of goods and basic necessities, such as fuel, and the two nations are agreeing on issues more than disagreeing on them.

      Finland was a part of the Russian Empire for 108 years, after being annexed from the Swedish empire. Discontent with Russian rule, Finnish national identity, and World War I eventually caused Finland to break away from Russia, taking advantage of the fact that Russia was withdrawing from World War I and a revolution was starting in earnest. Following the Finnish Civil War and October revolution, Russians were virtually equated with Communists and due to official hostility to Communism, Finno-Soviet relations in the period between the world wars remained tense. Voluntary activists arranged expeditions to Karelia (heimosodat), which ended when Finland and the Soviet Union signed the Treaty of Tartu in 1920. However, the Soviet Union did not abide by the treaty when they blockaded Finnish naval ships. Finland was attacked by the Soviet Union in 1939. Finland fought the Winter War and the Continuation War against the Soviets in World War II. During the wars, the Finns suffered 90,000 casualties and inflicted severe casualties on the Russians (120,000 dead in the Winter War and 200,000 in the Continuation War).

      Contemporary issues include problems with border controls causing persistent truck queues at the border, airspace violations, pollution of the Baltic Sea, and Russian duties on exported wood to Finland's pulp and paper industry. Russia also considered large swathes of land near the Finnish border as special security area where foreign land ownership is forbidden. A similarly extensive restriction does not apply to Russian citizens. The Finnish Defence Forces and Finnish Security Intelligence Service have suspected that Russians have made targeted land purchases near military and other sensitive installations for intelligence or special operations purposes.[108][109] Right-wing commentators accuse the government of continuing the policy of Finlandisation.

      Recently, Finland-Russia relations have been under pressure with annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation, which Finland considers illegal. Together with the rest of the European Union, Finland enforces sanctions against Russia that followed. Still, economic relations have not entirely deteriorated: 11.2% of imports to Finland are from Russia, and 5.7% of exports from Finland are to Russia, and cooperation between Finnish and Russian authorities continues.[110]

        Serbia 1929
      • Finland has an embassy in Belgrade.[111]
      • Serbia has an embassy in Helsinki.[112]
      • Finland is an EU member and Serbia is an candidate.
      • Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs: relations with Serbia
      • Serbian Ministry of Foreign Affairs: relations with Finland March 5, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
        Slovakia 1 January 1993
       
      Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Prime Minister of Slovakia Eduard Heger in 2022
      • Finland recognised the independence of Slovakia on January 1, 1993.
      • Finland has an embassy and an honorary consulate in Bratislava.[113]
      • Slovakia has an embassy in Helsinki.
      • Both countries are full members of the European Union.
      • Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs: relations with Slovakia
        Slovenia 17 February 1992
      • Finland recognised Slovenia on January 17, 1992.
      • Finland has an embassy in Ljubljana.
      • Slovenia has an embassy in Helsinki.
      • Both countries are full members of the European Union.

      Tensions between the countries rose in late 2008 when a news program on Finland's national broadcasting company station YLE accused Finnish weapons manufacturer Patria of bribing Slovenian officials to secure an arms deal. Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša formally complained to the Finnish ambassador in Ljubljana.[114] This controversy became known as the Patria case.

      • Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs: relations with Slovenia
        Spain 16 August 1918 See Finland–Spain relations
       
      Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez in Stockholm on 2 February 2023
        Sweden 10 January 1918
       
      President Urho Kekkonen, Swedish Queen Silvia, director Åke Wolfram of Wärtsilä, and king Carl XVI Gustaf in Turku on 28 April 1981
       
      Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson in Stockholm on 2 February 2023

      Finland and Sweden have always had very close relations, resulting from shared history, numerous commonalities in society and politics, and close trade relations. A newly appointed Foreign Minister makes his or her first state visit to Sweden. Finnish politicians often consider Sweden's reaction to international affairs first as a base for further actions, and thus finally both countries often agree on such issues. If there has ever been any dissonance between the two countries those were the Åland question in the early 1920s and the Swedish declaration of non-belligerent status during the Winter War. Finland and Sweden are members of the European Union and the Schengen agreement, freeing international travel and trade between the countries. Furthermore, both participate in the Nordic Council, which grants Swedish nationals slightly more extensive rights than the EU/Schengen treaties alone.

      • Finland has an embassy in Stockholm.
      • Sweden has an embassy in Helsinki.
        Switzerland 29 January 1926
      • Finland recognised Switzerland on January 29, 1926.
      • Finland has an embassy in Bern.
      • Switzerland has an embassy in Helsinki.
        Turkey 20 May 1920 See Turkey in Asia Above
        Ukraine 26 February 1992 See Finland–Ukraine relations
       
      Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin meets with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Kyiv, Ukraine, 26 May 2022
      • In 1918, Finland was one of the first countries which recognised Ukraine in 1918 and opened its diplomatic mission in Kyiv.
      • Finland recognised Ukraine on December 30, 1991.
      • Finland has an embassy in Kyiv.[117]
      • Ukraine has an embassy in Helsinki.[118]
      • Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs: relations with Ukraine
        United Kingdom 6 May 1919[44]

      Oceania

      Country Formal Relations Began Notes
        Australia 31 May 1949

      Diplomatic relations were established on May 31, 1949.

      • Australia is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
      • Finland has an embassy in Canberra and a consulate in Sydney.
        New Zealand 22 July 1950
       
      Prime Minister Sanna Marin and New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern
      • Finland is accredited to New Zealand from its embassy in Canberra, Australia.
      • New Zealand is accredited to Finland from its embassy in The Hague, Netherlands.

      International organization participation

      See also

      References

      1. ^ . Archived from the original on January 16, 2009. Retrieved October 26, 2008.
      2. ^ a b c "Finland's foreign policy idea" December 17, 2008, at the Wayback Machine ("Suomen ulkopolitiikan idea"), Risto E. J. Penttilä, 2008
      3. ^ "Helsinki again a centre of international espionage". Hs.fi. from the original on June 6, 2012. Retrieved December 24, 2017.
      4. ^ "Russia Sends Bone-Chilling Message To Sweden & Finland; Threatens 'Military Implications' If They Go The Ukraine Way". The EurAsian Times. February 25, 2022.
      5. ^ . Formin.finland.fi. Archived from the original on October 23, 2017. Retrieved December 24, 2017.
      6. ^ Wilsford, David, ed. (1995). Political leaders of contemporary Western Europe: a biographical dictionary. Greenwood. pp. 347–352.
      7. ^ Hicks, Agnes H. (July 1959). "Finland and the Russian Revolution 1917–1922. By C. Jay Smith, Athens, Ga., University of Georgia Press, 1958". International Affairs. 35 (3): 347–348. doi:10.2307/2612298. JSTOR 2612298.
      8. ^ Michael Jones (2013). "Leningrad: State of Siege". Basic Books. p. 38. ISBN 0-7867-2177-4
      9. ^ Finland Investment and Business Guide Volume 1. January 10, 2018. p. 32. ISBN 9781438759012.
      10. ^ Tiilikainen, Teija (January 26, 2007). "Finland — An EU Member with a Small State Identity". Journal of European Integration. 28 (1): 73–87. doi:10.1080/07036330500480599. S2CID 154513560.
      11. ^ "Former Finnish premier is cleared over Iraq papers leak". The Independent. March 20, 2004.
      12. ^ Vinayaraj, V.K. (2011). "Finland's Self-Defence Strategies". International Studies. 48 (3–4): 257–280. doi:10.1177/0020881713485019. S2CID 220703384.
      13. ^ a b "Countries and regions A–Z". from the original on March 30, 2018. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
      14. ^
      foreign, relations, finland, this, article, factual, accuracy, compromised, date, information, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, january, 2012, foreign, relations, finland, responsibility, president, f. This article s factual accuracy may be compromised due to out of date information Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2012 The foreign relations of Finland are the responsibility of the president of Finland who leads foreign policy in cooperation with the government Implicitly the government is responsible for internal policy and decision making in the European Union Within the government preparative discussions are conducted in the government committee of foreign and security policy ulko ja turvallisuuspoliittinen ministerivaliokunta which includes the Prime Minister and at least the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Minister of Defence and at most four other ministers as necessary 1 The committee meets with the President as necessary Laws concerning foreign relations are discussed in the parliamentary committee of foreign relations ulkoasiainvaliokunta utrikesutskottet The Ministry of Foreign Affairs implements the foreign policy Embassy of Finland to the United States in Washington D C During the Cold War Finland s foreign policy was based on official neutrality between the Western powers and the Soviet Union while simultaneously stressing Nordic cooperation in the framework of the Nordic Council and cautious economic integration with the West as promoted by the Bretton Woods Agreement and the free trade treaty with the European Economic Community Finland shares this history with close neighbour Sweden which Finland was a part of until the split of the Swedish empire in 1809 Finland did not join the Soviet Union s economic sphere Comecon but remained a free market economy and conducted bilateral trade with the Soviet Union After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 Finland unilaterally abrogated the last restrictions imposed on it by the Paris peace treaties of 1947 and the Finno Soviet Agreement of Friendship Cooperation and Mutual Assistance The government filed an application for membership in the European Union EU three months after the dissolution of the Soviet Union and became a member in 1995 Finland did not attempt to join NATO even though post Soviet countries on the Baltic Sea and elsewhere joined Nevertheless defence policymakers have quietly converted to NATO equipment and contributed troops President Martti Ahtisaari and the coalition governments led Finland closer to the core EU in the late 1990s Finland was considered a cooperative model state and Finland did not oppose proposals for a common EU defence policy 2 This was reversed in the 2000s when Tarja Halonen and Erkki Tuomioja made Finland s official policy to resist other EU members plans for common defense 2 However Halonen allowed Finland to join European Union Battlegroups in 2006 and the NATO Response Force in 2008 Relations with Russia are cordial and common issues include bureaucracy particularly at the Vaalimaa border crossing airspace violations development aid Finland gives to Russia especially in environmental problems that affect Finland and Finland s energy dependency on Russian gas and electricity Behind the scenes the administration witnessed a resurrection of Soviet era tactics as recently as 2017 The Finnish Security Intelligence Service the nation s security agency says the known number of Russian agents from Foreign Intelligence Service SVR and GRU now exceeds Cold War levels and there are unknown numbers of others 3 Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in March 2022 that her government would have to respond if Finland became a NATO member 4 As of March 2011 Finland maintains diplomatic relations with all UN member states 5 All NATO countries approved Finland s accession to the military alliance by April 1 2023 and it officially joined on April 4 The move was the final process in Finland s transition from conducting a foreign policy of neutrality to clearly standing as an official part of the Western bloc Contents 1 History 1 1 2000 constitution 2 Multilateral relations 3 Diplomatic relations list 3 1 Multilateral 4 Africa 5 Americas 6 Asia 7 Europe 8 Oceania 9 International organization participation 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory Edit President of Latvia Janis Cakste and President of Finland Lauri Kristian Relander during Relander s 1926 official visit to Latvia In the background the Foreign Minister of Finland Eemil Nestor Setala to the right After the Second World War J K Paasikivi in the middle the 7th President of Finland was remembered as a main architect of Finland s foreign policy especially with the Soviet Union 6 Yugoslavian President Josip Broz Tito with the Finnish president Urho Kekkonen in Helsinki 1964 Finnish President Sauli Niinisto with Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2016 Finnish President Niinisto with US President Donald Trump in 2017 After independence from Russia in 1917 the Finnish Civil War including interventions by Imperial Germany and Soviet Russia and failure of the Communist revolution resulted in the official ban on Communism and strengthening relations with Western countries Overt alliance with Germany was not possible due to the result of the First World War but in general the period of 1918 to 1939 was characterised by economic growth and increasing integration to the Western world economy Relations with Soviet Russia from 1918 to 1939 were icy voluntary expeditions to Russia called heimosodat ended only in 1922 four years after the conclusion of the Finnish Civil War However attempts to establish military alliances were unsuccessful 7 Thus when the Winter War broke out Finland was left alone to resist the Soviet attack Later during the Continuation War Finland declared co belligerency with Nazi Germany and allowed Northern Finland to be used as a German attack base For 872 days the German army aided indirectly by Finnish forces besieged Leningrad the Soviet Union s second largest city 8 The peace settlement in 1944 with the Soviet Union led to the Lapland War in 1945 where Finland fought Germans in northern Finland From the end of the Continuation War with the Soviet Union in 1944 until 1991 the policy was to avoid superpower conflicts and to build mutual confidence with the Western powers and the Soviet Union Although the country was culturally socially and politically Western Finns realised they had to live in peace with the Soviets and so could take no action that might be interpreted as a security threat The dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 opened up dramatic new possibilities for Finland and has resulted in the Finns actively seeking greater participation in Western political and economic structures The popular support for the strictly self defensive doctrine remains 9 2000 constitution Edit In the 2000 constitution where diverse constitutional laws were unified into one statute the leading role of the President was slightly moderated However because the constitution still stipulates only that the President leads foreign policy and the government internal policy the responsibility over European Union affairs is not explicitly resolved Implicitly this belongs to the powers of the government In a cohabitation situation as with Matti Vanhanen s recent second government right wing government and left wing President Tarja Halonen there can be friction between government ministers and the president The arrangement has been criticised by Risto E J Penttila for not providing a simple answer of who s in charge 2 Multilateral relations EditSee also Finland NATO relations Finnish foreign policy emphasises its participation in multilateral organisations Finland joined the United Nations in 1955 and the European Union in 1995 As noted the country also is a member of NATO s Partnership for Peace as well as an observer in the Euro Atlantic Partnership Council The military has been prepared to be more compatible with NATO as co operation with NATO in peacekeeping is needed but military alliance does not have popular support Political scientist Teija Tiilikainen has attributed tensions like this one to the importance that Finland s political identity places on sovereignty and the sometimes competing stress it places on international cooperation 10 In the European Union Finland is a member of the Eurozone and in addition the Schengen treaty abolishing passport controls 60 of foreign trade is to the EU Other large trade partners are Russia and the United States Finland is well represented in the UN civil service in proportion to its population and belongs to several of its specialised and related agencies Finnish troops have participated in United Nations peacekeeping activities since 1956 and the Finns continue to be one of the largest per capita contributors of peacekeepers in the world Finland is an active participant in the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe OSCE and in early 1995 assumed the co chairmanship of the OSCE s Minsk Group on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict Cooperation with the other Scandinavian countries also is important to Finland and it has been a member of the Nordic Council since 1955 Under the council s auspices the Nordic countries have created a common labor market and have abolished immigration controls among themselves The council also serves to coordinate social and cultural policies of the participating countries and has promoted increased cooperation in many fields In addition to the organisations already mentioned Finland is a member of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development the International Monetary Fund the World Trade Organization the International Finance Corporation the International Development Association the Bank for International Settlements the Asian Development Bank the Inter American Development Bank the Council of Europe and the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union Finland has moved steadily towards integration into Western institutions and abandoned its formal policy of neutrality which has been recast as a policy of military nonalliance coupled with the maintenance of a credible independent defence Finland s 1994 decision to buy 64 F 18 Hornet fighter planes from the United States signalled the abandonment of the country s policy of balanced arms purchases from Communist countries and Western countries In 1994 Finland joined NATO s Partnership for Peace the country is also an observer in the North Atlantic Cooperation Council Finland became a full member of the EU in January 1995 at the same time acquiring observer status in the EU s defence arm the Western European Union In 2003 Anneli Jaatteenmaki of the Centre Party won the elections after she had accused her rival Paavo Lipponen who was prime minister at the time of allying neutral Finland with the United States in the war in Iraq during a meeting with President George W Bush and thus associated Finland with what many Finns considered an illegal war of aggression Lipponen denied the claims and declared that We support the UN and the UN Secretary General Jaatteenmaki resigned as prime minister after 63 days in office amid accusations that she had lied about the leak of the documents about the meeting between Bush and Lipponen This series of events was considered scandalous and it is named Iraq leak or Iraq gate 11 Generally Finland has abided by the principle of neutrality and has good relations with nearly all countries as evidenced by the freedom of travel that a Finnish passport gives though relations with Russia remain strained and are often tense due to past historical grievances including Russian threats and past invasion 12 Diplomatic relations list Edit Diplomatic relations of Finland Finland has established diplomatic relations with all United Nations member states plus the Holy See and Kosovo 13 Country Date 13 1 Sweden 10 January 19181 Denmark 10 January 19183 Norway 6 April 1918 10 June 1940 October 19454 Argentina 11 May 1918 14 5 Japan 24 May 1918 22 September 1944 8 March 19576 Austria 19 July 1918 12 March 1938 29 March 19496 Bulgaria 19 July 1918 20 September 1944 4 June 19488 Netherlands 14 August 19189 Spain 16 August 191810 Greece 1 March 191911 Poland 8 March 1919 15 24 June 1941 October 194512 France 1919 24 June 1940 October 194513 United Kingdom 28 March 1919 1 August 1941 15 September 194514 United States 30 May 1919 30 June 1944 18 August 194515 Belgium 9 July 191916 Italy 6 September 191917 Portugal 10 January 192018 Romania 28 June 1920 20 September 1944 14 October 194919 Russia 31 December 1920 29 November 1939 31 December 1940 29 November 1941 6 August 1945 as Soviet Union 20 Luxembourg 24 October 192121 Hungary 12 April 1922 20 September 1944 3 October 194722 Turkey 9 December 1924 16 23 Switzerland 29 January 192624 Serbia 1928 as Yugoslavia 17 25 Brazil 8 April 192926 Afghanistan 15 December 1930 11 May 195627 Chile 20 February 193128 Iran 12 December 1931 18 29 Uruguay 21 March 193530 Mexico 2 October 1936 Holy See 31 July 1942 19 31 Egypt 15 February 194732 Iceland 15 August 194733 Canada 21 November 194734 South Africa 15 May 194935 Australia 31 May 194936 India 10 September 194937 New Zealand 22 July 195038 China 28 October 195039 Israel 14 November 195040 Pakistan 12 January 195141 Syria 22 May 195342 Colombia 26 March 195443 Venezuela 31 March 195444 Myanmar 21 June 195445 Thailand 21 June 195446 Indonesia 6 September 195447 Sri Lanka 24 September 195448 Philippines 14 July 195549 Lebanon 21 June 195650 Albania 8 June 195651 Cuba 23 January 195952 Iraq 15 May 195953 Ethiopia 17 July 195954 Morocco 17 July 195955 Tunisia 17 July 195956 Jordan 28 November 195957 Cameroon 15 January 196058 Chad 12 August 196059 Mali 7 October 196060 Sudan 27 January 196161 Guinea 19 July 196162 Cyprus 2 September 196163 Ireland 2 November 196164 Algeria 18 January 196365 Nigeria 18 January 196366 Peru 29 March 196367 Mongolia 8 July 196368 Bolivia 21 September 196369 Paraguay 20 November 196370 Ivory Coast 18 June 196471 Malawi 13 July 196472 Ecuador 5 February 196573 Kenya 14 June 196574 Tanzania 14 June 196575 Uganda 14 June 196576 Libya 28 September 196577 Costa Rica 23 August 196678 Haiti 29 September 196679 Republic of the Congo 22 March 196780 El Salvador 14 April 196781 Guatemala 18 August 196782 Zambia 8 March 196883 Senegal 31 January 196984 Kuwait 21 February 196985 Malta 21 February 196986 Saudi Arabia 6 June 196987 Cambodia 20 January 1970 9 August 197688 Liberia 24 March 197089 Democratic Republic of the Congo 3 April 197090 Central African Republic 22 May 197091 Somalia 12 March 197192 Trinidad and Tobago 17 December 197193 Bangladesh 5 May 197294 Malaysia 17 November 197295 Germany 7 January 197396 Vietnam 25 January 197397 Singapore 7 February 197398 Oman 1 April 197399 North Korea 1 June 1973100 South Korea 24 August 1973101 Mauritius 31 October 1973102 Qatar 1 April 1974103 Guinea Bissau 9 August 1974104 Nepal 21 September 1974105 Bahrain 20 December 1974106 Laos 1 January 1975107 Panama 1 January 1975108 United Arab Emirates 21 February 1975109 Mozambique 18 July 1975110 Niger 28 November 1975111 Nicaragua 22 December 1975112 Honduras 30 January 1976113 Angola 18 September 1976114 Madagascar 1 June 1977115 Papua New Guinea 31 September 1977116 Barbados 1 December 1977117 Fiji 1 December 1977118 Ghana 1 December 1977119 Jamaica 1 December 1977120 Comoros 19 December 1977121 Botswana 1 July 1978122 Lesotho 1 February 1979123 Mauritania 1 March 1979124 Sao Tome and Principe 1 March 1979125 Guyana 2 April 1979126 Yemen 1 June 1979127 Kiribati 24 August 1979128 Burundi 1 January 1980129 Burkina Faso 15 February 1980130 Grenada 1 June 1980131 Vanuatu 31 July 1980132 Zimbabwe 1 August 1980133 Rwanda 1 June 1983134 Cape Verde 22 July 1983135 Dominican Republic 2 January 1984136 Maldives 10 August 1984137 Bhutan 1 May 1986138 Seychelles 1 April 1987139 Gabon 20 May 1988140 Gambia 1 September 1988141 Brunei 11 November 1988142 Benin 22 December 1988143 Namibia 21 March 1990144 Eswatini 20 September 1990145 Estonia 7 June 1920 June 1940 29 August 1991146 Latvia 16 January 1921 June 1940 29 August 1991147 Lithuania 14 October 1921 June 1940 29 August 1991148 Slovenia 17 February 1992149 Croatia 19 February 1992150 Belarus 26 February 1992151 Moldova 26 February 1992152 Tajikistan 26 February 1992153 Ukraine 26 February 1992154 Uzbekistan 26 February 1992155 Kyrgyzstan 23 March 1992156 Azerbaijan 24 March 1992157 Armenia 25 March 1992158 Kazakhstan 13 May 1992159 Turkmenistan 11 June 1992160 Liechtenstein 26 June 1992161 Georgia 8 July 1992162 Czech Republic 1 January 1993163 Slovakia 1 January 1993164 Eritrea 28 May 1993165 Tonga 1 December 1993166 North Macedonia 17 December 1993167 Marshall Islands 26 December 1993168 Bosnia and Herzegovina 29 December 1994169 Andorra 17 July 1995170 San Marino 17 July 1995171 Belize 19 June 1997172 Solomon Islands 16 July 1999173 Samoa 11 August 1999174 East Timor 20 June 2002175 Suriname 28 June 2005176 Bahamas 2 December 2005177 Montenegro 12 June 2006178 Djibouti 14 March 2007179 Monaco 29 March 2007180 Equatorial Guinea 30 April 2008181 Sierra Leone 17 June 2008182 Antigua and Barbuda 26 September 2008 Kosovo 3 February 2009183 Tuvalu 6 March 2009184 Nauru 24 March 2009185 Palau 5 May 2009186 Dominica 19 August 2009187 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 11 September 2009188 Saint Kitts and Nevis 22 September 2009189 Saint Lucia 22 September 2009190 Federated States of Micronesia 4 May 2010191 Togo 12 May 2010192 South Sudan 29 June 2012 20 Multilateral Edit Organization Formal Relations Began Notes Nordic Council 1955 Former Prime Minister of Finland Jyrki Katainen in Nordic Council back in 2011 Ilkka Christian Bjorklund Secretary General of the Nordic Council 1982 1987 Gehard af Schulten was Secretary General of the Nordic Council 1987 1989 Jan Erik Enestam was Secretary General of the Nordic Council from 1 August 2007 2013 European Union 1995 See 1995 enlargement of the European Union Minister Sanna Marin and President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen meeting in Helsinki 3 2 2022 NATO 2023 See Finland NATO relations The Finnish ambassador hands the NATO membership application to Secretary General Jens StoltenbergAfrica EditCountry Formal Relations Began Notes Algeria 18 January 1963 Algeria has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Algiers Angola 18 September 1976 Angola is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland is represented in Angola through its embassy in Maputo Mozambique Finland also has an honorary consulate in Luanda Botswana 1 July 1978 Botswana is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland is represented in Botswana through its embassy in Pretoria South Africa Finland has an honorary consulate in Gaborone Burkina Faso 1 July 1978 Burkina Faso is represented in Finland through its embassy in Copenhagen Denmark Burundi 1 January 1980 Burundi is represented in Finland through its embassy in Oslo Norway Finland is represented in Burundi through its embassy in Dar es Salaam Tanzania Comoros Comoros is represented in Finland by its embassy in Paris France 21 Djibouti 14 March 2007 Finland is represented in Djibouti through its embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia 22 Djibouti is represented in Finland through its embassy in Moscow Russia 23 Egypt 15 February 1947 Finland recognised Egypt on February 15 1947 Egypt has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Cairo Ethiopia July 17 1959 See Ethiopia Finland relations Ethiopia is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia is one of Finland s long term development partners and in the water and education sectors 24 On April 29 2009 the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development announced that the Finnish government had made a grant of 11 4 million euros to enable the Benishangul Gumuz Region to upgrade its capacity to plan and manage its rural water supply and sanitation program to achieve universal access for all Ethiopians 25 Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Ethiopia Kenya 14 June 1965 Finland recognised Kenya on December 13 1963 Kenya is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland has an embassy in Nairobi and an honorary consulate in Mombasa Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Kenya Morocco 17 July 1959 Finland recognised Morocco s independence on June 8 1956 Finland has an embassy in Rabat an honorary consulate general in Casablanca and other honorary consulates in Agadir Kenitra Marrakech Safi and Tangiers 26 Morocco has an embassy in Helsinki Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Morocco Mozambique 18 July 1975 Finland recognised Mozambique on July 4 1975 Mozambique is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland has an embassy in Maputo Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Mozambique Namibia 21 March 1990 See Finland Namibia relations Finland recognised Namibia on March 21 1990 Both countries established diplomatic relations on the same day Namibia is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland has an embassy in Windhoek and an honorary consulate in Walvis Bay South Africa 15 May 1949 See Finland South Africa relations A South African legation was established in 1967 and relations were then upgraded to ambassadorial level in March 1991 27 Finland has an embassy in Pretoria a general consulate in Johannesburg and a consulate in Cape Town South Africa is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm Sweden During World War II South Africa declared war on Finland 28 Finland was a strong supporter of the dismantling of Apartheid in South Africa 28 29 30 South African exports to Finland include fresh and dried fruits wine pulp paper iron steel and coal South Africa imports telecommunication equipment paper board products and machinery from Finland 27 Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with South Africa South African Department of Foreign Affairs relations with Finland Tanzania 14 June 1965 Finland recognised Tanganyika on December 9 1961 Tanzania is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland has an embassy in Dar es Salaam Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Tanzania Tunisia 17 July 1959 Finland recognised Tunisia s independence on June 8 1956 Since 1994 Finland has an embassy in Tunis Previously Finland was represented in Tunisia through its embassies in Algiers Algeria and Rome Italy 31 Tunisia has an embassy in Helsinki Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Tunisia Zambia 8 March 1968 Finland recognised Zambia on October 29 1964 Zambia is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland has an embassy in Lusaka Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with ZambiaAmericas EditCountry Formal Relations Began Notes Antigua and Barbuda 26 September 2008 Finland s embassy in Mexico City Mexico attends to consular matters relating to Antigua and Barbuda Argentina 11 May 1918 See Argentina Finland relations Argentina has an embassy in Helsinki 32 Finland has an embassy in Buenos Aires and five honorary consulates in Cordoba Mendoza Obera Rosario and Ushuaia 33 Argentine Ministry of Foreign Relations list of bilateral treaties with Finland in Spanish only Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Argentina Bahamas 2 December 2005 Finland s embassy in Ottawa Ontario Canada attends to consular matters relating to The Bahamas Finland also has an honorary consulate in Nassau Barbados 1 December 1977 Barbados is represented in Finland by their embassy in Brussels Belgium Finland has an honorary consulate general in Christ Church Belize 19 June 1997 Finland s embassy in Mexico City Mexico attends to consular matters relating to Belize Finland also has an honorary consulate in Belize City Bolivia 21 September 1963 Bolivia is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland is accredited to Bolivia from its embassy in Lima Peru Brazil 1929 See Brazil Finland relations President Tarja Halonen together with Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva the President of Brazil in Helsinki 2007 Brazil has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Brasilia Canada 21 November 1947 See Canada Finland relations Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Canada has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Ottawa Chile 17 June 1919 See Chile Finland relations Chile recognised Finland s independence on June 17 1919 Diplomatic relations between them were established in 1931 and have been continuously maintained despite pressures at times to discontinue them 34 The two countries maintain resident ambassadors in both capitals 34 Chile has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Santiago Colombia 26 May 1954 Colombia has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Bogota The relations between Colombia and Finland are harmonious as both countries share a similar ideology based on democracy human rights and a lasting peace It s because of this that Colombia has decided to open an embassy in Helsinki Colombia also defines Finland as a key player on Colombia s accession into the OECD and the ratification of the Colombia European Union Trade Agreement 35 Costa Rica 23 August 1966 Costa Rica is represent in Finland by their embassy in Oslo Norway Finland s embassy in Mexico City Mexico attends to consular matters relating to Costa Rica Finland also has an honorary consulate general and honorary vice consulate in San Jose Cuba 23 January 1959 Cuba has an embassy in Helsinki Finland s embassy in Mexico City Mexico attends to consular matters relating to Cuba Finland also has an honorary consulate general in Havana Dominica 18 August 2009 Finland has an honorary consulate in Roseau Dominican Republic 2 January 1984 The Dominican Republic is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland has an honorary consulate general in Santo Domingo Ecuador 5 February 1965 Ecuador is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland s embassy in Lima Peru attends to consular matters relating to Ecuador Finland has an honorary consulate in Guayaquil and Quito El Salvador 14 April 1967 El Salvador is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland s embassy in Mexico City Mexico attends to consular matters relating to El Salvador Finland has an honorary consulate and an honorary vice consulate in San Salvador Grenada 1 June 1980 Grenada is represented in Finland by their embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland has an honorary consulate in St George s Guatemala 18 August 1967 Guatemala is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Brussels Belgium Finland has an honorary consulate in Guatemala City Guyana 2 April 1979 Both countries established diplomatic relations on April 2 1979 36 Guyana is represented in Finland by their embassy in Brussels Belgium Finland also has an honorary consulate general in Georgetown Haiti 29 September 1966 Finland s embassy in Mexico City Mexico attends to consular matters relating to Haiti Finland has an honorary consulate general in Port au Prince Honduras 30 January 1976 Honduras is represented in Finland by their embassy in Brussels Belgium Finland s embassy in Mexico City Mexico attends to consular matters relating to Honduras Finland has an honorary consulate general in Tegucigalpa and an honorary consulate in San Pedro Sula Jamaica 1 December 1977 Jamaica is represented in Finland by their embassy in London United Kingdom Finland has an honorary consulate general in Kingston Mexico 2 October 1936 See Finland Mexico relations President Sauli Niinisto meeting with President Enrique Pena Nieto in 2015 Mexico recognized the independence of Finland in July 1920 Finland has an embassy in Mexico City 37 Mexico has an embassy in Helsinki 38 Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs Relations with Mexico Nicaragua 22 December 1975 See Finland Nicaragua relations Finland is accredited to Nicaragua from its embassy in Mexico City Mexico 39 Nicaragua has an honorary consulate in Helsinki 40 Panama 1 December 1975 Panama is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland s embassy in Bogota Colombia attends to consular matters relating to Panama Finland has an honorary consulate general in Panama City Paraguay 20 November 1963 Paraguay is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland s embassy in Buenos Aires Argentina attends to consular matters relating to Paraguay Finland has an honorary consulate in Asuncion Peru 29 March 1963 Peru has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Lima Saint Kitts and Nevis 22 September 2009 Finland has an honorary consulate in Basseterre Saint Lucia 22 September 2009 Finland has an honorary consulate in Castries Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 30 January 1976 Finland is represented in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines through a roving ambassador 41 Finland has an honorary consulate in Kingstown 42 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines is represented in Finland through it embassy in London 43 Suriname 28 June 2005 Finland s embassy in Brasilia Brazil attends to consular matters relating to Suriname Finland has an honorary consulate in Paramaribo Trinidad and Tobago 17 December 1971 Trinidad and Tobago is accredited to Finland from its embassy in London United Kingdom Finland has an honorary consulate general in Barataria United States 30 May 1919 44 See Finland United States relations President Ronald Reagan meeting with President Mauno Koivisto in 1988 President Donald J Trump with President Sauli Niinisto of Finland at the Mantyniemi Residence July 16 2018 5 25 1988 President Reagan meeting with President Mauno Henrik Koivisto during a trip to Finland at the Helsinki airport in Vantaa Relations between the United States and Finland are warm Some 200 000 US citizens visit Finland annually and about 3 000 US citizens are resident there The US has an educational exchange program in Finland that is comparatively large for a Western European country of Finland s size It is financed in part from a trust fund established in 1976 from Finland s final repayment of a US loan made in the aftermath of World War I Finland is bordered on the east by Russia and as one of the former Soviet Union s neighbours has been of particular interest and importance to the US both during the Cold War and in its aftermath Before the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991 longstanding US policy was to support Finnish neutrality and to maintain and reinforce Finland s historic cultural and economic ties with the West The US has welcomed Finland s increased participation since 1991 in Western economic and political structures Economic and trade relations between Finland and the United States are active and were bolstered by the F 18 purchase US Finland trade totals almost 5 billion annually The US receives about 7 of Finland s exports mainly wood pulp and paper ships machinery electronics and instruments and refined petroleum products 45 and provides about 7 of its imports principally computers semiconductors aircraft and machinery Finland has an embassy in Washington D C and consulates general in Los Angeles and New York City United States has an embassy in Helsinki Uruguay 21 March 1935 See Finland Uruguay relations Finland s embassy in Buenos Aires Argentina accredited to Uruguay and maintains an honorary consulate in Montevideo Uruguay has an embassy in Helsinki Venezuela 31 March 1954 Finland is accredited to Venezuela from its embassy in Bogota Colombia Venezuela is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Oslo Norway Asia EditCountry Formal Relations Began Notes Afghanistan 11 May 1956 Afghanistan recognised the independence of Finland on July 17 1928 Afghanistan is accredited to Finland through its embassy in Oslo Norway 46 Finland opened a liaison office in Kabul in 2002 It converted into an embassy on January 1 2006 47 Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Afghanistan Armenia 25 March 1992 See Armenia Finland relations Finland recognised Armenia on December 30 1991 Armenia is represented in Finland by a non resident ambassador based in Yerevan at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Finland is represented in Armenia by a non resident ambassador based in Helsinki at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and an honorary consulate in Yerevan Both countries are full members of the Council of Europe Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Armenia Azerbaijan 24 March 1992 See Azerbaijan Finland relations Finland recognised Azerbaijan on March 24 1992 Azerbaijan is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm Sweden and an honorary consulate in Helsinki Finland is represented in Azerbaijan by a non resident ambassador based in Helsinki at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and an honorary consulate in Baku Both countries are full members of the Council of Europe Cambodia 20 January 1970 48 Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Prime Minister Hun Sen Finland recognized Cambodia on 19 December 1969 Diplomatic relations established on 20 January 1970 re established 9 August 1976 48 Cambodia is represented in Finland through its embassy in London England 49 Finland is represented in Cambodia through its embassy in Bangkok Thailand 50 China October 28 1950 51 See China Finland relations The two international trade organisations are the Finland China Trade Association and the China Council for Promotion of International Trade CCPIT One of the fastest growing areas of trade between the two countries is in environmental protection 1 2 and information technology Nokia is the largest Finnish investor in China China has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Beijing and consulates general in Hong Kong and Shanghai Georgia 8 July 1992 See Finland Georgia relations President Sauli Niinisto with President of Georgia Salome Zourabichvili in 2019 Finland recognised Georgia on March 27 1992 Finland is represented in Georgia by a non resident ambassador based in Helsinki at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and an honorary consulate in Tbilisi Georgia is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm Sweden and an honorary consulate in Helsinki Both countries are full members of the Council of Europe On April 22 2009 the Georgian Foreign Minister visited Finland 52 Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Georgia Georgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Finland India 10 September 1949 See Finland India relations The Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh and the Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen in Helsinki on 2006 Finland has an embassy in New Delhi and three honorary consulates in Kolkata Chennai and Mumbai India has an embassy in Helsinki 53 Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with India Indonesia 6 September 1954 Finland recognised the independence of Indonesia on February 10 1950 Finland has an embassy in Jakarta and honorary consulates in Denpasar and Medan 54 Indonesia has an embassy in Helsinki 55 Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Indonesia Iran See Finland Iran relations Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and the Farah Pahlavi visit to Espoo Finland To their right the Finnish president Urho Kekkonen in 1970 Photograph of the Shah and the Shahbanu during their visit to Tapiola residencial area in Espoo Finland To their right the Finnish president Urho Kekkonen Finland has an embassy in Tehran 56 Iran has an embassy in Helsinki 57 Iraq 15 May 1959 Finland recognised Iraq on May 15 1959 Finland has an embassy in Baghdad Iraq has an embassy in Helsinki Israel 14 November 1950 See Finland Israel relations Finland recognised Israel on March 18 1949 Finland has an embassy in Tel Aviv 58 Israel has an embassy in Helsinki 59 Both countries are full members of the Union for the Mediterranean Along with the rest of the European Union Finland has not recognized the State of Palestine See also History of the Jews in Finland Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Israel Japan 6 September 1919 See Finland Japan relations Sauli Niinisto and Shinzo Abe Japan recognised Finland on May 23 1919 Finland has an embassy in Tokyo and honorary consulate general in Osaka and other honorary consulates in Kitakyushu Nagano Nagoya and Sapporo Japan has an embassy in Helsinki Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Japan Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Finland Kazakhstan 13 May 1992 60 See Finland Kazakhstan relations Finland recognized Kazakhstan upon its independence from the Soviet Union Finland has an embassy in Nur Sultan Kazakhstan has an embassy in Helsinki Malaysia 17 November 1972 61 See Finland Malaysia relations Finland has an embassy in Kuala Lumpur 62 Malaysia has an embassy in Helsinki 63 Nepal 30 August 1955 Finland recognised Nepal on December 14 1955 Finland has an embassy in Kathmandu Nepal is represented in Finland through its embassy in Copenhagen Denmark Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Nepal North Korea 1 June 1973 64 See Finland North Korea relations Finland recognized the People s Democratic Republic of Korea on April 13 1973 65 Finland condemns North Korean nuclear tests and fully agrees with EU foreign policy statements on this matter 65 International trade has been irregular and sporadic and it is controlled by UN and EU sanctions 66 Finland has contributed to humanitarian assistance to North Korea through the Red Cross and the World Food Programme 66 Neither Finland nor North Korea currently have resident ambassadors North Korea is represented by the North Korean embassy in Stockholm Sweden 66 Finland is represented by the Finnish embassy in Seoul South Korea 67 Northern Cyprus Northern Cyprus has a Representative Office in Helsinki 68 Pakistan January 12 1951 See Finland Pakistan relations Finland is accredited to Pakistan from its Ministry of Foreign Affairs based in Helsinki Pakistan is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Saudi Arabia 23 September 1969 Finland has an embassy in Riyadh and an honorary consulate general in Jeddah 69 Saudi Arabia will open an embassy in Helsinki 70 Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Saudi Arabia South Korea 24 August 1973 The establishment of diplomatic relations between the Republic of Finland and the South Korea began on 1973 08 24 Finland recognised South Korea on April 13 1973 Finland has an embassy in Seoul 71 South Korea has an embassy in Helsinki 72 Syria 22 May 1953 Finland has an embassy in Damascus and two honorary consulates general in Aleppo and Latakia Syria is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm Sweden 73 Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Syria Thailand 21 June 1954 Thailand previously known as Siam recognised Finland s independence on October 9 1919 74 Siam was the second non European state after the United States and the first Asian state to recognise Finland s independence Finland has an embassy in Bangkok its honorary consulate general in Phuket and its honorary consulate in Chiang Mai 75 Thailand has an embassy in Helsinki 76 Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Thailand Turkey 20 May 1920 See Finland Turkey relations Turkey recognised the independence of Finland on February 21 1918 Finland has an embassy in Ankara and an honorary consulate general in Istanbul and other honorary consulates in Belek Bodrum and Izmir 77 Turkey has an embassy in Helsinki 78 Finland is an EU member and Turkey is an candidate Turkey and Finland are NATO members See also Turks in Finland Turkey s Ministry of Foreign Affairs political economic and commercial relations with Finland Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Turkey United Arab Emirates 21 February 1975 See Finland United Arab Emirates relations Finland recognised United Arab Emirates on February 21 1975 Finland has an embassy in Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates has an embassy in Helsinki Vietnam 5 January 1973 Finland recognised Vietnam on December 28 1972 Finland has an embassy in Hanoi and an honorary consulate in Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam has an embassy in Helsinki Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland about VietnamEurope EditCountry Formal Relations Began Notes Albania 8 June 1956 Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama Albania is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland is accredited to Albania from its embassy in Athens Greece Albania is an EU candidate and Finland is an member Albania supports Finland s NATO membership Austria 29 March 1949 See Austria Finland relations Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin and President of Austria Alexander Van der Bellen in 2023 Austria has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Vienna Both countries are full members of the European Union Belgium 9 July 1919 Belgium has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Brussels Both countries are full members of the European Union Bulgaria 5 August 1918 See Bulgaria Finland relations In 1963 the diplomatic representations of the two countries were upgraded to the level of embassy Bulgaria has an embassy in Helsinki and an honorary consulate in Kemi 79 Finland has an embassy in Sofia and an honorary consulate in Varna 80 Both countries are full members of the European Union Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Bulgaria Croatia 19 February 1992 See Croatia Finland relations Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic Croatia has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Zagreb Both countries are full members of the European Union Cyprus 2 September 1961 See Cyprus Finland relations Finland recognised Cyprus on August 16 1960 Cyprus has an embassy in Helsinki and an honorary consulate in Vantaa 81 Finland has an embassy in Nicosia 82 Both countries are full members of the European Union Cypriot Foreign Affairs List of bilateral treaties with Finland Czech Republic 1 January 1993 Czech Republic has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Prague Both countries are full members of the European Union Denmark 18 February 1918 See Denmark Finland relations Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Prime Minister of Denmark Mette Frederiksen in 2022 Denmark has an embassy in Helsinki Finland has an embassy in Copenhagen Denmark officially recognized Finland s independence in 1918 Both countries are full members of the Nordic Council and the Nordic Passport Union with no border controls or limitations on travel and residence On cases concerning an individual authorities must arrange translations between Finnish and Danish if necessary Both countries are members of the European Union Council of the Baltic Sea States Denmark and Finland share a long history where Danish Vikings settled in Finland and made crusades Both countries were also part of the Kalmar Union 83 Denmark was the first country along with Sweden to recognize Finland s Independence There are 3 000 Finns living in Denmark and 1 235 Danes living in Finland During Winter War over 1 000 Danish volunteers came to help Finland 84 During the Winter war and the Continuation war Denmark took 4 200 Finnish war children 85 Exports to Denmark value at 1 380 billion euros and imports from Denmark value at 1 453 billion making Denmark Finland s 10th largest import trading partner The Nordic Culture Fund and the Finnish Danish Cultural Fund support projects of artists in both countries Many tourists from Finland visit Denmark 206 000 in 2017 and vice versa 113 000 Danish tourists visited Finland in 2017 In 1918 Mannerheim visited Copenhagen asking if Prince Aage would have wanted to become the King of Finland Bilateral relations between Denmark and Finland in Finnish Estonia 29 August 1991 See Estonia Finland relations Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Prime Minister of Estonia Kaja Kallas in 2022 Finland s main language Finnish is related to Estonian and there is and has been a certain feeling of kinship 76 of Finns have visited Estonia and in 2004 1 8 million Finns reported visiting Estonia Finnish and Swedish investors are the largest foreign investors in Estonia 86 Finland and Estonia are members of the European Union and the Schengen agreement freeing international travel and trade between the countries Finland s government recognised Estonia s independence in 1920 In response to the Soviet invasion diplomatic missions were de facto removed However when Estonia declared independence this temporary obstruction was resolved Both countries restored diplomatic relations on August 29 1991 Estonia has an embassy in Helsinki and five honorary consulates in Oulu Turku Raseborg Tampere and Kotka Finland has an embassy in Tallinn and an honorary consulate in Tartu Finland contributed and continues to contribute military aid to Estonia e g training of officers provision of equipment Both countries are full members of the European Union France 24 January 1918 See Finland France relations France was one of the first countries which recognised Finland s independence on January 4 1918 Finland has an embassy in Paris and 18 honorary consulates in Ajaccio Bordeaux Brest Caen Cherbourg Dijon Lille Lyons Marseille Monaco Nancy Nice Reims Rouen Sete Strasbourg Toulouse and Papeete in Tahiti 87 France has an embassy in Helsinki and its honorary consulates in Hameenlinna Joensuu Jyvaskyla Kuopio Oulu Pori Rovaniemi Tampere and Turku 88 There are an estimated 6 000 Finns living in France French Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Finland Archived December 1 2008 at the Wayback Machine Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with France History of the relations of Finland and France on Finnish Embassy in Paris websites Both countries are full members of the European Union Germany 4 January 1918 See Finland Germany relations C G E Mannerheim Adolf Hitler and Risto Ryti in June 4th 1942 during Hitler s visit in Finland Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Chancellor Olaf Scholz Germany recognised Finland s independence on January 4 1918 Germany gave direct military support to Finnish independence by training Finnish Jagers and successfully intervened in Finnish Civil War in favor of the nationalist Whites During World War II the secret protocol in Molotov Ribbentrop pact enabled Winter War 1939 40 a Soviet attack on Finland Finland and Nazi Germany were co belligerents against Soviet Union during Continuation War 1941 44 but a separate peace with Soviet Union led to the Finnish German Lapland War 1944 45 The Federal Republic of Germany and the German Democratic Republic West and East Germany were both recognised on January 7 1972 by Finland Diplomatic relations between Finland and West Germany were established on January 7 1973 Finland has an embassy in Berlin and consulate general in Hamburg two honorary consulates general in Dusseldorf and Munich and other honorary consulates in Bremen Dresden Frankfurt am Main Hanover Kiel Lubeck Rostock Stuttgart and Wilhelmshaven Germany has an embassy in Helsinki 89 German Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Germany relations with Finland Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Germany Both countries are full members of the European Union Greece 5 January 1918 See Finland Greece relations Prime Minister Sanna Marin with Prime Minister of Greece Kyriakos Mitsotakis in 2022 Greece recognised Finland s independence on January 5 1918 Finland has an embassy in Athens Greece has an embassy in Helsinki Both countries are full members of the European Union Hungary 20 May 1947 See Finland Hungary relations Hungary recognised Finland on August 23 1920 Finland recognised Hungary on September 10 1920 Finland broke off diplomatic relations on September 20 1944 Diplomatic relations were re established on May 20 1947 Both national languages Finnish and Hungarian are Uralic languages which has led to cultural exchange albeit at a much smaller scale compared to the third major Uralic speaking country Estonia Finland has an embassy in Budapest and an honorary consulate in Pecs Hungary has an embassy in Helsinki and four honorary consulates in Turku Mariehamn Tampere and Joensuu 90 Both countries are full members of the European Union Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Hungary Iceland 15 August 1947 See Finland Iceland relations Sanna Marin met the Prime Minister of Iceland Katrin Jakobsdottir in Kesaranta on 2022 Finland has an embassy in Reykjavik 91 Iceland has an embassy in Helsinki 92 Both countries are full members of the Nordic Council and the Nordic Passport Union with no border controls or limitations on travel and residence On cases concerning an individual authorities must arrange translations between Finnish and Icelandic if necessary Ireland 2 November 1961 Prime Minister Sanna Marin with Taoiseach Prime Minister of Ireland Micheal Martin in 2022 Finland has an embassy in Dublin and three honorary consulates in Cork Dublin and Limerick 93 Ireland has an embassy in Helsinki 94 Both countries are full members of Council of Europe and of the European Union Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Ireland Italy 6 September 1919 See Finland Italy relations Finnish President Sauli Niinisto with Italian President Sergio Mattarella Italy recognised Finland s independence on June 27 1919 Finland has an embassy in Rome and two honorary consulate generals in Milan and Venice and other honorary consulates in Genoa Bari Cagliari Catania Florence Livorno Messina Naples Palermo Rimini Trieste and Turin 95 Italy has an embassy in Helsinki and its honorary consulates in Hanko Jyvaskyla Kotka Kuopio Oulu Pori Rovaniemi Tampere Turku and Vaasa 96 Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Italy Both countries are full members of the European Union Kosovo 3 February 2009 Main article Finland Kosovo relations Finland recognised Kosovo March 7 2008 97 98 Finland maintains an embassy in Pristina 99 Latvia 24 September 1919 See Finland Latvia relations Prime Minister Sanna Marin met Latvia s Prime Minister Krisjanis Karins 12 February 2020 Finland recognised Latvia s independence de facto on September 24 1919 and de jure on January 21 1921 Finland has an embassy in Riga Latvia has an embassy in Helsinki and four honorary consulates in Aland Satakunta Kymenlaakso and Oulu Both countries are full members of the Council of the Baltic Sea States and of the European Union Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Latvia Latvian Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Finland Lithuania 4 November 1919 See Finland Lithuania relations Finland recognised Lithuania s independence de facto on November 14 1919 and de jure on October 14 1921 Finland has an embassy in Vilnius and an honorary consulate in Klaipeda Lithuania has an embassy in Helsinki Both countries are full members of the Council of the Baltic Sea States and of the European Union Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Lithuania Luxembourg 25 October 1921 Sanna Marin and Prime Minister of Luxembourg Xavier Bettel in 2022 Luxembourg recognised Finland s independence on October 25 1921 Finland has an embassy in Luxembourg City 100 Luxembourg is accredited to Finland through its embassy in Copenhagen 101 Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Luxembourg Both countries are full members of the European Union Montenegro 12 July 2006 Sanna Marin met the Prime Minister of Montenegro Dritan Abazovic on 2022 Finland recognised Montenegro 29 June 2006 Montenegro supports Finland s NATO membership Netherlands 18 August 1918 See Finland Netherlands relations President of Finland Kekkonen with the Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard of Lippe Biesterfeld on their way to Palace October 24 1972 The Netherlands recognised Finland s independence on January 28 1918 Finland has an embassy in The Hague and honorary consulate general in Amsterdam and other honorary consulates in Rotterdam and Terneuzen 102 The Netherlands has an embassy in Helsinki and consulates in Kuopio Mariehamn Oulu Rovaniemi Tampere Turku and Vaasa 103 Dutch Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Finland Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with the Netherlands Both countries are full members of the European Union North Macedonia Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin with North Makedonian President Stevo Pendarovski in 2022 Finland is an EU member and North Macedonia is an candidate North Macedonia supports Finland s NATO membership Norway 6 April 1918 See Finland Norway relations Norway recognised Finland s independence on January 10 1918 Finland has an embassy in Oslo and other honorary consulates in Bergen Bodo Drammen Farsund Grimstad Halden Hamar Hammerfest Haugesund Horten Kirkenes Kristiansand Kristiansund Larvik Moss Narvik Sarpsborg Stavanger Tromso Trondheim Vadso and Alesund Norway has an embassy in Helsinki Both countries are full members of the Nordic Council and the Nordic Passport Union with no border controls or limitations on travel and residence On cases concerning an individual authorities must arrange translations between Finnish and Norwegian if necessary Both countries are full members of the Council of the Baltic Sea States and Council of Europe Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Norway Poland 8 March 1919 See Finland Poland relations Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Prime Minister of Poland Mateusz Morawiecki in 2022 Finland has an embassy in Warsaw and an honorary consulate in Gdynia Poland has an embassy in Helsinki 104 Both countries are full members of the Council of the Baltic Sea States and of the European Union Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Poland Portugal 10 January 1920 Portugal recognised Finland s independence on December 19 1919 Finland has an embassy in Lisbon and honorary consulates in Faro Lisbon Porto Vila Real de Santo Antonio Ponta Delgada in the Azores and Funchal in Madeira 105 Portugal has an embassy in Helsinki Both countries are full members of the European Union Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Portugal Romania 14 October 1949 Romania recognised Finland on April 8 1920 Finland has an embassy in Bucharest and two honorary consulates in Bucharest and Constanţa 106 Romania has an embassy in Helsinki 107 Both countries are full members of the European Union and the Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Romania Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Finland Russia 30 December 1991 Main article Finland Russia relations Nikita Khrushchev speaking Urho Kekkonen Leonid Brezhnev Nikolai Podgorny Jorma Vanamo and Kustaa Loikkanen in 1963 Vladimir Putin and Sauli Niinisto in 2017 Relations with Russia are peaceful and friendly Finland imports a lot of goods and basic necessities such as fuel and the two nations are agreeing on issues more than disagreeing on them Finland was a part of the Russian Empire for 108 years after being annexed from the Swedish empire Discontent with Russian rule Finnish national identity and World War I eventually caused Finland to break away from Russia taking advantage of the fact that Russia was withdrawing from World War I and a revolution was starting in earnest Following the Finnish Civil War and October revolution Russians were virtually equated with Communists and due to official hostility to Communism Finno Soviet relations in the period between the world wars remained tense Voluntary activists arranged expeditions to Karelia heimosodat which ended when Finland and the Soviet Union signed the Treaty of Tartu in 1920 However the Soviet Union did not abide by the treaty when they blockaded Finnish naval ships Finland was attacked by the Soviet Union in 1939 Finland fought the Winter War and the Continuation War against the Soviets in World War II During the wars the Finns suffered 90 000 casualties and inflicted severe casualties on the Russians 120 000 dead in the Winter War and 200 000 in the Continuation War Contemporary issues include problems with border controls causing persistent truck queues at the border airspace violations pollution of the Baltic Sea and Russian duties on exported wood to Finland s pulp and paper industry Russia also considered large swathes of land near the Finnish border as special security area where foreign land ownership is forbidden A similarly extensive restriction does not apply to Russian citizens The Finnish Defence Forces and Finnish Security Intelligence Service have suspected that Russians have made targeted land purchases near military and other sensitive installations for intelligence or special operations purposes 108 109 Right wing commentators accuse the government of continuing the policy of Finlandisation Recently Finland Russia relations have been under pressure with annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation which Finland considers illegal Together with the rest of the European Union Finland enforces sanctions against Russia that followed Still economic relations have not entirely deteriorated 11 2 of imports to Finland are from Russia and 5 7 of exports from Finland are to Russia and cooperation between Finnish and Russian authorities continues 110 Finland has an embassy in Moscow a consulate general in Saint Petersburg and two branches of the consulate in Murmansk and Petrozavodsk Russia has an embassy in Helsinki a consulate general in Turku and consulates in Lappeenranta and Mariehamn Serbia 1929 Finland has an embassy in Belgrade 111 Serbia has an embassy in Helsinki 112 Finland is an EU member and Serbia is an candidate Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Serbia Serbian Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Finland Archived March 5 2012 at the Wayback Machine Slovakia 1 January 1993 Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Prime Minister of Slovakia Eduard Heger in 2022 Finland recognised the independence of Slovakia on January 1 1993 Finland has an embassy and an honorary consulate in Bratislava 113 Slovakia has an embassy in Helsinki Both countries are full members of the European Union Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Slovakia Slovenia 17 February 1992 Finland recognised Slovenia on January 17 1992 Finland has an embassy in Ljubljana Slovenia has an embassy in Helsinki Both countries are full members of the European Union Tensions between the countries rose in late 2008 when a news program on Finland s national broadcasting company station YLE accused Finnish weapons manufacturer Patria of bribing Slovenian officials to secure an arms deal Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Jansa formally complained to the Finnish ambassador in Ljubljana 114 This controversy became known as the Patria case Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Slovenia Spain 16 August 1918 See Finland Spain relations Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez in Stockholm on 2 February 2023 Spain recognised Finland s independence on February 21 1918 Finland has an embassy in Madrid and two honorary consulates general in Barcelona and Sevilla and other honorary consulates in A Coruna Benidorm Bilbao Gijon Malaga Palma de Mallorca Pilar de la Horadada Santa Cruz de Tenerife Santander Valencia and Vigo 115 Spain has an embassy in Helsinki 116 Both countries are full members of the European Union Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs relations with Spain Sweden 10 January 1918 Main article Finland Sweden relations President Urho Kekkonen Swedish Queen Silvia director Ake Wolfram of Wartsila and king Carl XVI Gustaf in Turku on 28 April 1981 Prime Minister Sanna Marin and Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson in Stockholm on 2 February 2023 Finland and Sweden have always had very close relations resulting from shared history numerous commonalities in society and politics and close trade relations A newly appointed Foreign Minister makes his or her first state visit to Sweden Finnish politicians often consider Sweden s reaction to international affairs first as a base for further actions and thus finally both countries often agree on such issues If there has ever been any dissonance between the two countries those were the Aland question in the early 1920s and the Swedish declaration of non belligerent status during the Winter War Finland and Sweden are members of the European Union and the Schengen agreement freeing international travel and trade between the countries Furthermore both participate in the Nordic Council which grants Swedish nationals slightly more extensive rights than the EU Schengen treaties alone Finland has an embassy in Stockholm Sweden has an embassy in Helsinki Switzerland 29 January 1926 Finland recognised Switzerland on January 29 1926 Finland has an embassy in Bern Switzerland has an embassy in Helsinki Turkey 20 May 1920 See Turkey in Asia Above See Finland Turkey relations Ukraine 26 February 1992 See Finland Ukraine relations Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin meets with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy Kyiv Ukraine 26 May 2022 In 1918 Finland was one of the first countries which recognised Ukraine in 1918 and opened its diplomatic mission in Kyiv Finland recognised Ukraine on December 30 1991 Finland has an embassy in Kyiv 117 Ukraine has an embassy in Helsinki 118 Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs relations with Ukraine United Kingdom 6 May 1919 44 Finland has an embassy in London and honorary consulates in Aberdeen Belfast Birmingham Bristol Cardiff Dover Dundee Edinburgh Gibraltar Glasgow Hamilton Harwich Hull Immingham Leeds Lerwick Liverpool Manchester Middlesbrough Newcastle upon Tyne Nottingham Plymouth Rochester Sheffield Southampton and St Helier 119 The United Kingdom has an embassy in Helsinki and honorary consulates in Jyvaskyla Kotka Kuopio Oulu Rovaniemi Turku Tampere Vaasa and Aland 120 Both countries are full members of the Council of Europe Oceania EditCountry Formal Relations Began Notes Australia 31 May 1949 Main article Australia Finland relations Diplomatic relations were established on May 31 1949 Australia is accredited to Finland from its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland has an embassy in Canberra and a consulate in Sydney New Zealand 22 July 1950 Prime Minister Sanna Marin and New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern Finland is accredited to New Zealand from its embassy in Canberra Australia New Zealand is accredited to Finland from its embassy in The Hague Netherlands International organization participation EditAfDB AsDB Australia Group BIS CBSS CCC CE CERN EAPC EBRD ECE EIB ESA EU FAO G 9 IADB IAEA IBRD ICAO ICC ICC ICRM IDA IEA IFAD IFC IFRCS IHO ILO IMF IMO ITUC Interpol IOC IOM ISO ITU MINURSO NAM guest NC NEA NIB NSG OAS observer OECD OPCW OSCE PCA PFP UN UNCTAD UNESCO UNHCR UNIDO UNIKOM UNITAR UNMEE UNMIBH UNMIK UNMOGIP UNMOP UNOMIG UNTAET UNTSO UPU WEU observer WFTU WHO WIPO WMO WTrO Zangger CommitteeSee also EditList of diplomatic missions in Finland Ministry for Foreign Affairs Finland Politics of Finland Pulp mill conflict between Argentina and Uruguay for the conflict over the installation of a pulp mill by the Finnish company Botnia in Uruguay across the Uruguay River Visa requirements for Finnish citizens Arctic policy of FinlandReferences Edit Cabinet Committees Archived from the original on January 16 2009 Retrieved October 26 2008 a b c Finland s foreign policy idea Archived December 17 2008 at the Wayback Machine Suomen ulkopolitiikan idea Risto E J Penttila 2008 Helsinki again a centre of international espionage Hs fi Archived from the original on June 6 2012 Retrieved December 24 2017 Russia Sends Bone Chilling Message To Sweden amp Finland Threatens Military Implications If They Go The Ukraine Way The EurAsian Times February 25 2022 Diplomatic relations established between Finland and Kiribati Formin finland fi Archived from the original on October 23 2017 Retrieved December 24 2017 Wilsford David ed 1995 Political leaders of contemporary Western Europe a biographical dictionary Greenwood pp 347 352 Hicks Agnes H July 1959 Finland and the Russian Revolution 1917 1922 By C Jay Smith Athens Ga University of Georgia Press 1958 International Affairs 35 3 347 348 doi 10 2307 2612298 JSTOR 2612298 Michael Jones 2013 Leningrad State of Siege Basic Books p 38 ISBN 0 7867 2177 4 Finland Investment and Business Guide Volume 1 January 10 2018 p 32 ISBN 9781438759012 Tiilikainen Teija January 26 2007 Finland An EU Member with a Small State Identity Journal of European Integration 28 1 73 87 doi 10 1080 07036330500480599 S2CID 154513560 Former Finnish premier is cleared over Iraq papers leak The Independent March 20 2004 Vinayaraj V K 2011 Finland s Self Defence Strategies International Studies 48 3 4 257 280 doi 10 1177 0020881713485019 S2CID 220703384 a b Countries and regions A Z Archived from the original on March 30 2018 Retrieved April 1 2018 a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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