Poland is sending a team to Finland to advise the Nordic country on how to protect its border from “hybrid attacks” being launched by Russia.

Finland has this month closed seven of its eight road crossings with Russia and announced yesterday that the final one would also be shut. Those decisions were made in response to a growing number of migrants trying to cross, with Finland saying there is evidence that Russia is behind the development.

Poland has in recent years experienced a similar issue on its border with Belarus, where since mid-2021 tens of thousands of migrants and asylum seekers – mainly from the Middle East, Asia and Africa – have been trying to cross with the help of the Belarusian authorities.

Speaking last night to broadcaster TVP, the head of Poland’s National Security Bureau (BBN), Jacek Siewiera, announced that a Polish advisory mission was being dispatched to Finland.

“The decision is related to the intensification of hybrid attacks on the Finnish-Russian border,” he explained, adding that a request for support had been made by Finland’s president, Sauli Niinistö, during a visit last week to Warsaw to meet his Polish counterpart Andrzej Duda.

Poland has “dealt with a whole spectrum of threats: in the information sphere, in the sphere of cognitive warfare, in narrative issues, but also those related to the application of international law and carrying out tasks at the border”, said Siewiera.

“The aim of the mission is to transfer the experience that Poland has gained during this time,” he explained. “We want to provide our new ally within NATO structures with help and our experience.”

According to Finland’s border guard, this month has seen around 900 asylum seekers enter from Russia, up from an average of less than one a day previously. Arrivals are citizens of countries including Morocco, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria and Yemen.

In reference to the “cognitive sphere”, Siewiera explained that he was referring to issues such as “the involvement of civic movements, non-governmental organisations, various actors in the public arena who take part in the discussion about how the state responds in the face of forced migration”.

Since the beginning of the Belarus border crisis in 2021, Poland’s government has adopted a tough approach in response, including boosting soldier numbers in the area, building a physical and electronic barrier, and implementing a controversial policy of “pushing back” people across the border.

That has led to criticism from both local activists and international organisations, including the United Nations and Human Rights Watch. A number of Polish court rulings have found the pushbacks to be unlawful.

However, the government argues that it has taken justified measures to protect what is not only Poland’s, but also the EU’s and NATO’s eastern border. Its approach has received backing from Germany and the EU.


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Main image credit: Irek Dorozanski / DWOT (under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

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