Military | Europe
Sweden-Finland NATO Integration: Two Years In, the Alliance Looks Fundamentally Different
Two years after Sweden and Finland completed their NATO accession, the full military integration of Europe's most capable neutral-era militaries is reshaping alliance planning.
Sweden and Finland in NATO: How Two Neutrals Changed the Alliance Forever
Two years after Sweden and Finland completed their NATO accession — Sweden's in March 2024, Finland's having come a year earlier — the military integration of the two Nordic countries into the alliance has progressed sufficiently that defence planners can now make confident assessments of how the Baltic and Nordic security architecture has been fundamentally transformed. The accession was driven by Russia's invasion of Ukraine but has produced consequences that extend well beyond the immediate calculation that triggered it.
Finland's 1,340-kilometre land border with Russia is now a NATO border — the longest the alliance shares with Moscow, and patrolled by one of the most well-equipped, battle-ready armies in Europe. Finnish military culture, shaped by the Winter War experience and decades of serious defence investment, has produced a credible conventional deterrent that NATO planners consider one of the alliance's most capable ground forces relative to the size of the country that fields it. The integration of Finnish air power — operating F/A-18 Hornets and transitioning to F-35A — into NATO air policing and Baltic air defence architecture has substantially improved allied coverage of a region that was previously managed with a smaller footprint.
Sweden's contribution focuses particularly on maritime and air power in the Baltic Sea, which NATO now effectively controls in a way it did not before Swedish membership. Sweden's Gripen fighter fleet, its submarine force, and its sophisticated electronic intelligence capabilities have been integrated into NATO command structures and are now available for alliance taskings. The Baltic Sea, once a strategically ambiguous body of water with significant Russian maritime access, has become far more clearly dominated by NATO-aligned nations and their combined naval capabilities.