-
Sabalenka wants to drink, 'forget about tennis' after Wimbledon exit
-
Reflective Ronaldo takes on critics 'trying to kill me for 23 years'
-
Mooney stars as Australia hammer England in women's World Cup final
-
Verstappen claims Red Bull car 'dangerous' after crash
-
Djokovic makes history, Osaka sends Sabalenka crashing out of Wimbledon
-
Trump thanks FIFA for suspending USA's Balogun World Cup ban
-
Osaka beats world number one Sabalenka in Wimbledon last 16
-
Mooney stars as Australia hammer England in women's T20 World Cup final
-
Eala eyeing Wimbledon quarters, Dimitrov faces Fery
-
Russell concedes Ferrari are threat to Mercedes
-
'Privileged' Del Toro wins Tour de France stage, Pogacar up to 2nd
-
Leclerc snaps winless run to reignite title race
-
Del Toro too tired to watch Mexico World Cup clash
-
Infernos devastate forests as Europe's temperatures rise again
-
Court frees Albania protesters held after violent clashes
-
'Tough' Leclerc delivers Ferrari's 250th win with victory in British GP
-
Four-legged rescuers lead way after Venezuela quakes
-
Tour de France stage 3rd stage to go ahead despite forest fires: official
-
France show they can ditch flair and win a different way in World Cup quest
-
Spain's Rodri warns Portugal best yet to come at World Cup
-
Australia hold England to 150-4 in Women's T20 World Cup final
-
Djokovic makes Wimbledon history to reach quarter-finals
-
Leclerc delivers Ferrari's 250th win with victory in British GP
-
Del Toro wins Tour de France stage, Pogacar up to 2nd
-
White supremacist march in DC just 'messy' democracy: US official
-
Euphoric homecoming for Cape Verde after heroic World Cup defeat
-
'Country Roads' stars as unofficial US anthem at World Cup
-
Tour de France stage under threat due to forest fires: official
-
F1 boss Domenicali hopes to restore cancelled Gulf grand prix
-
UK hard-right leader Farage faces new allegations over gifts
-
Real Madrid sign Dumfries from Inter Milan
-
OPEC+ raises quotas again as Middle East calms
-
At the foot of Mount Olympus, a return to ancient Greek heritage
-
Azam to captain Pakistan on West Indies and England Test tours
-
Turkey eyes F110 fighter jet engines as Trump comes to town
-
Revival hopes grow for long-closed Greek Orthodox seminary off Istanbul
-
England, Mexico take centre stage in Azteca blockbuster
-
Trump hails US, blasts 'communists' in 250th anniversary speech
-
'Very dangerous' super typhoon nears US Pacific islands
-
Taiwanese film hunters rescue ageing reels from bygone era
-
Australia stand by under-fire Popovic after World Cup exit
-
Trump arrives for US 250th birthday speech after storm delay
-
Afghan car trade screeches to a halt due to regional wars
-
All Blacks wing Fineanganofo's debut began 'in the toilet, spewing'
-
Pipe dreams: Bangladesh surfers chase waves at Asian Games
-
Xhaka -- Switzerland's World Cup rock born to be skipper
-
England can write new Azteca history by meeting Mexico challenge, says Tuchel
-
Trump pushes ahead with US 250th birthday speech after storm delay
-
Paraguay coach says team 'fought like lions' in World Cup loss to France
-
Australia's Schmidt rues missed opportunities as Wilson defends Donaldson
Finland in NATO: strategic shift with material gain
Finland on Tuesday becoming the 31st member of NATO is a strategic step that doubles the military alliance's border with Russia and provides the coalition with additional military capacity.
Here are the key facts:
- Russia 'more vulnerable' -
Finland broke with decades of non-alignment to ask to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization after Russia invaded its pro-Western neighbour Ukraine in February last year.
For Moscow, which has repeatedly warned NATO against expanding, Finland's accession extends the bloc's presence right on its western doorstep.
Russia -- which shares a 1,300-kilometre (800-mile) border with Finland -- said on Monday it would boost its military presence in its west and northwest in response.
With Finland joining NATO, "Russia's northwestern flank becomes more vulnerable", security experts Nicholas Lokker and Heli Hautala wrote on Friday on defence-focused website War on the Rocks.
"Its border with the alliance will then extend from the Arctic Ocean to the Baltic Sea."
- More NATO border to defend -
As a NATO member, Finland is bound by the alliance's mutual defence clause, Article 5.
It will benefit not only from its allies' conventional military assistance but also from their nuclear deterrence.
In return, the Nordic nation, which intends to boost its defence budget by 40 percent by 2026, could contribute some of its military resources to defend the alliance.
The country of 5.5 million people counts just 12,000 professional soldiers.
But it trains more that 20,000 each year through its conscription service programme, giving the army a pool of 900,000 Finns as potential reserves.
This means that in case of war, the army can deploy 280,000 Finnish citizens at any one time.
It has a fleet of 55 F-18 US combat aircraft, which it plans to replace with more advanced F-35s from 2025 onwards, as well as 200 tanks and more than 700 artillery guns.
But the country joining NATO also means hundreds of extra kilometres of border to defend for the alliance.
- Allied forces -
The only military equipment that NATO actually owns are a fleet of Airborne Warning and Control System planes (AWACS) -- which can monitor an area almost as big as Poland -- and five Global Hawk high-altitude surveillance drones.
For all other military gear, each NATO member chooses what to contribute, though all have promised to reinforce the alliance's eastern flank.
France dispatched 500 troops to join US soldiers in Romania last year right after Russia invaded Ukraine. Dutch and Belgian soldiers soon joined them.
As of December, some 5,000 foreign troops were stationed in Romania -- the largest contingent of allied forces on the bloc's southeastern flank.
NATO conducted nine joint exercises last year, from the eastern Mediterranean to the Baltic Sea, the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) says.
- The troops -
"Together NATO allies represent 50 percent of the world's military might," NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said on Tuesday welcoming Finland into the alliance. "As long as we stand together and protect each other... there will be no military attack against a NATO ally."
According to the Supreme Headquarters of Allied Powers in Europe (SHAPE), NATO can count on up to 3.5 million soldiers and personnel.
The three nations providing most military staff are the United States with 1.47 million active troops plus 800,000 reservists, Turkey with 425,000 soldiers and 200,000 reservists, and France with 210,000 troops and 40,000 reservists.
NATO has since 2004 had a multinational response force of some 40,000 soldiers on top of the 100,000 US troops already on European soil. It says it hopes to increase this to 300,000 soldiers.
It has also set up a "spearhead force" within it, dubbed the "Very High Readiness Joint Task Force" or VJTF, able to deploy 5,000 personnel in two to three days.
- 'Renewed unity' -
NATO had in recent years faced an existential crisis.
French President Emmanuel Macron in 2019 famously said that NATO was experiencing "brain death" after it failed to respond to Turkey's unilateral invasion of northeast Syria.
But Russian President Vladimir Putin's "re-invasion of Ukraine has provided the fuel for the alliance's renewed unity and recommitment to cooperative security, crisis management, and collective defence," retired general Philip M. Breedlove, who used to head US European Command, wrote in February.
According to IISS, the alliance has since doubled its deployment from four battle groups –- in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland –- to eight, including Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania and Slovakia.
But "it is likely that most of the high-readiness forces will need to be European", it said in an annual assessment for 2023.
N.Mitchell--AT