- Paasikivi-Kekkonen Line
The Paasikivi-Kekkonen line is president
Urho Kekkonen 's (1956-1981) realization and development of his predecessorPaasikivi 's doctrine, aimed atFinland 's survival as an independent sovereign democratic and capitalistcountry in the immediate proximity of theSoviet Union .The principal architect of the post-1944 foreign policy of neutrality was J.K. Paasikivi, who was president from 1946 to 1956.
Urho Kekkonen , president from 1956 until 1981, further developed this policy, stressing that Finland should be an active rather than a passive neutral.Background
Finland and the Soviet Union signed the
Paris Peace Treaty in February 1947, which in addition to the concessions of theMoscow Peace Treaty provided for:
* limiting the size of Finland's defense forces,
* cession to the Soviet Union of thePetsamo area on theArctic coast,
* lease of thePorkkala peninsula off Helsinki to the Soviets for use as anaval base (prematurely terminated in 1956),
* free transit access to this area across Finnish territory,
*war reparations to the Soviet Union decided to 300 million gold dollars (amounting to an estimated 570 millionUS dollar s in 1952, the year the payments ended).Realization
In April 1948, Finland signed an Agreement of Friendship, Cooperation, and Mutual Assistance with the Soviet Union. Under this mutual assistance pact, Finland was obligated, with the aid of the Soviet Union, if necessary, to resist armed attacks by "Germany or its allies" (i.e.
NATO ) against Finland or against the Soviet Union "through" Finland. At the same time, the agreement recognized Finland's desire to remain outside great-power conflicts. This agreement was renewed for 20 years in 1955, in 1970, and again in 1983.Liquidation
The Finns responded cautiously in 1990-1991 to the decline of Soviet power and the U.S.S.R.'s subsequent dissolution. They unilaterally abrogated restrictions imposed by the 1947 and 1948 treaties with the exception of a ban on acquiring
nuclear weapons , joined in voicing Nordic concern over the coup against Soviet leaderMikhail Gorbachev , and gave increasing unofficial encouragement to Baltic independence.At the same time, by replacing the Soviet-Finnish mutual assistance pact with treaties on general cooperation and trade, Finns put themselves on an equal footing while retaining a friendly bilateral relationship. Finland now is boosting cross-border commercial ties and touting its potential as a commercial gateway to Russia. It has reassured
Russia that it will not raise claims for formerly Finnish territory ceded after theContinuation War (though a small but noisy minority of the people disagrees), and continues to reaffirm the importance of good bilateral relations.
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