Of yet, no date of the event has been set, but senior Finnish Artic Council official Aleksi Härkönen told Finnish daily Helsingin Sanomat that it was "quite possible" that the summit will be held on the anniversary of Finland's independence. Finland's Independence Day is a national public holiday, held on December 6 to celebrate the country's declaration of independence from Russia in 1917. The next year, the centenary of Finland's independence will be celebrated with pomp and circumstance.
According to Härkönen, Finnish President Sauli Niinistö has already spoken in favor of this initiative. In 2016, Niinistö repeatedly came under fire from, among others, his fellow Nordic politicians, for preserving good contacts with Russian President Vladimir Putin and even inviting him to his residence of Kultaranta. Niinistö made it clear that direct diplomatic contacts with Finland's vast eastern neighbor and key economic partner must continue despite political discrepancies on issues such as the Ukrainian crisis or the war in Syria.
Earlier, Finland displayed great enthusiasm about the international data cable project due to perspectives of becoming a hub for data traffic between Asia and Central Europe, thanks to the similar Baltic cable between Finland and Germany, which was completed last year. The cable would also greatly benefit Russia and the Kola Peninsula in particular, giving industrial areas Northwest Russia a greater connectivity.
According to political scientist Aleksei Kolesnikov from Carnegie Center Moscow, Finland is generally seen as a good neighbor, which at heart stands closer to Russia than Europe generally does, Finnish national broadcaster Yle reported.
The Arctic Council unites eight nations that have territory in the Arctic: Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden and the US.