The Finnish company will present the Steel Eagle drone with an extended range of action developed for Ukraine and Ukrainian specialists. Source: Finnish public service media company Yle, as reported by European Pravda Details: The Finnish company Insta is presenting a new drone at the SecD Day conference and exhibition,
In an NZZ interview, Finnish Foreign Minister Elina Valtonen warns that Russia's aggression is directed against all of Europe. Forcing Ukraine to accept a convenient peace would be dangerous for the whole world,
Finnish high-tech company Insta has developed the Steel Eagle ER drone with an extended range, in collaboration with Ukrainian specialists. — Ukrinform.
The Finnish company Insta describes the system as a combination of an "explosive charge and a drone." The drone can be used to transport an explosive charge that can detonate above a target.
Finnish Defence Minister Antti Häkkinen hosts a meeting with his Nordic counterparts in Helsinki on Thursday. Finland is chair of the Nordic Defence Cooperation group this year, and Thursday's meeting marks its second of the year.
A researcher says that hardly anyone has high expectations for Finland's year-long leadership term of the OSCE. But Foreign Minister Elina Valtonen has a different view of the situation.
A controversial memoir of a Finnish woman who migrated to Stalin’s Soviet Russia in the 1930s and escaped in 1941. Ninety years later, her granddaughter has translated the diary into English.
The new president’s lukewarm attitude toward the North Atlantic Treaty is a ‘European strategic wake-up call,’ France’s Macron warns.
Planned Russian military reforms that would increase Moscow's troop numbers by 30% are a threat to NATO and should be met with vigilance, the chief of Finland's military intelligence service Pekka Turunen said on Thursday.
Russia's barbaric war in Ukraine is draining resources, but Leningrad Military District will in the longer run significantly expand its troops near the border with Finland and Norway.
The country's stockpiling agency, NESA, told the paper that Finland will reduce the size of its grain reserves this spring. Currently, these reserves cover around nine months' consumption, but this will be cut to six. The move could potentially disrupt the market, according to the Central Union of Agricultural Producers and Forest Owners (MTK).