Two Norwegian F-35 jets at Keflavik Air Base, Iceland. Photo: Torbjørn Kjosvold / Forsvaret
Finland’s
first F-35s will be based up north
Lapland
Air Command in Rovaniemi will get the first new F-35 fighter jets in 2026.
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By
Thomas Nilsen
May 28,
2022
The Air Force’s F-35 fleet will be commissioned first to the
Lapland Air Force in Rovaniemi in 2026,” Air Force Commander Brigadier General
Juha-Pekka Keränen said.
The airbase is located on the Arctic Circle, seven kilometers north of
Rovaniemi City Centre, and is Finland’s northernmost base with fighter
jets.
It was last December Finland announced it had chosen to buy 64 of the
F-35 to replace the current fleet of F/A-18 Hornets. The first
F-35s will arrive at Rovaniemi in 2026 and all 64, including those to
be based further south in Finland, will be in operation by 2030.
With Finland’s decision to join NATO, the cross-border strength
of the Alliance’s fleet of F-35s in northernmost Europe will be significant.
Norway, which already has received 34 of 52 aircraft, has its main airbase at
Ørlandet in the south, but a few of the planes are on so-called Quick Reaction
Alert (QRA) for NATO at Evenes airbase north of the Arctic Circle.
On Thursday this week, two F-35s were scrambled from Evenes to
meet two Russian military aircraft over the Barents Sea north of Finnmark
region. The planes, a MiG-31 and a Su-24, did not violate Norwegian airspace.
If NATO will deploy some of the Rovaniemi-based F-35s on QRA, the flying time north to meet Russian military planes flying west of the Kola Peninsula will be shorter than flying from the Evenes airbase in Norway. However, as part of Norway’s reassurance policy towards Russia, other NATO allies have so far not been allowed to use the airspace over the eastern part of Finnmark when flying missions to monitor Russian activities.
A flight from Rovaniemi to the Barents Sea will for a short minute or two have
to cross over Norwegian airspace. Most likely, Norway will continue to
facilitate for NATO’s QRA over northern waters, while Finland from 2026 will
guard NATO’s new 1,340 kilometers long land-border with Russia.
Finland decided to apply for NATO membership on May 17 as a
direct consequence of Russia’s brutal unprovoked military attack on Ukraine. On
Friday, Defense Minister Antti Kaikkonen announced the decision that Finland
will invite partner countries for more military training, especially this
summer.
Additional training
“The main goal of the complementary training and exercise
activities with close partners is to strengthen Finland’s defense capabilities
and, with the presence of the troops, to show concrete support to Finland,”
Kaikkonen said in a statement.
Extra training includes the air force, and will partly be
arranged as cross-border operations into neighboring countries’ territories,
like Sweden and Norway.
Complementary activities will improve Finland’s capacity to join
NATO, the statement reads.
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