Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Finland invests in contracts with Israel to boost its naval-defense systems

“It’s critical that Finland has a modern navy that is fit for purpose. The Baltic Sea has become a possible focal point for tension between East and West,” said Jussi Niinistö, Finland’s Defense Minister.

Israeli Gabriel anti-ship missile on display at the Clandestine Immigration and Naval Museum in Haifa, Israel. Credit: Bukvoed/Wikimedia Commons.
Israeli Gabriel anti-ship missile on display at the Clandestine Immigration and Naval Museum in Haifa, Israel. Credit: Bukvoed/Wikimedia Commons.

Finland has been relying on Israeli weaponry to strengthen its navy, according to Defense News.

With its presence in the Baltic Sea to protect against Russian interests, the Finnish Defense Forces has undergone a $1.5 billion naval boost that will include a $500 million investment for ships consisting of surface-to-surface missiles, ship guns, sea mines and torpedoes.

“It’s critical that Finland has a modern navy that is fit for purpose. The Baltic Sea has become a possible focal point for tension between East and West,” said Jussi Niinistö, Finland’s Defense Minister. “We are dealing with a more unpredictable Russia. Increased military cooperation with partners will also see the Navy more engaged in joint international exercises in the region, especially with our Nordic neighbors and NATO forces.”

The Finnish navy awarded contracts worth almost $185.76 million in July to Israel Aerospace Industries to receive the Israeli Gabriel missile system between 2019 and 2025. The defense system will be installed on Hamina-class missile boats, in addition to the new Squadron 2020 vessels, expected to begin construction in 2019.

Israel Aerospace Industries was picked over Norwegian technology firm Kongsberg, European missile manufacturer MBDA, American multinational corporation Boeing, and the Swedish aerospace and defense company Saab.

The Gabriel missiles are anti-ship missiles that were first developed after missiles sank an Israeli ship along the northern Sinai shores just months after Israel won the 1967 Six-Day War, killing 47 Israeli officers and sailors, and injuring 100.

The United States “expects the Iraqi government to immediately take all measures to dismantle the Iran-aligned militia groups in Iraq,” the department stated.
Doron Almog told JNS that one of the most poignant parts of a new documentary about his family is when he was teaching Eran, who died at 23 in 2007, how to swim.
The U.N. officials, who include critics of Israel, warn that the measure could curb free speech as Paris moves to codify modern forms of Jew-hatred.
“My mother told me I was gonna do it, and so that was sort of enough for me,” he told JNS of becoming an Eagle Scout.
“This attack is not an isolated incident,” stated Gady Gronich of the Conference of European Rabbis. It’s “part of a dangerous trend we have been seeing since Oct. 7, 2023.”
Andrew Ireland, a state representative, said that the changes are “good first steps, but there is more work to do.”