Finlandize
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See also: finlandize
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]Finlandize (third-person singular simple present Finlandizes, present participle Finlandizing, simple past and past participle Finlandized)
- (transitive, politics) To control a smaller or weaker nation's foreign policy through intimidation.
- 1971, The Cold War: Origins and Developments Hearings Before the Subcomittee on Europe..., 92-1, June 7, 11, 14, and 18, 1971, United States Congress, page 143:
- Do you think that Russia with Eastern Europe would not ahve tried to not only neutralize, but Finlandize Germany?
- 1977, Parameters Journal of the US Army War College, volume VII, number 2, United States Army War College, page 9:
- The removal of American troops would be construed by the Kremlin as an invitation to Finlandize Europe.
- 1983, Daily Report Latin America, volume 83:
- A Marxist plan to "Finlandize" Honduras in an effort to spread subversive violence throughout Central America has been denounced by Steadman Fagoth, commander in chief of the anti-Sandinist insurgent Indian force called Miskitos, Sumus, and Remas (MISURA).
- 1985, Charles Krauthammer, Cutting Edges: Making Sense of the Eighties, Random House, →ISBN, page 173:
- “One can Finlandize a democracy,“ says a former Sandanista foreign policy advisor. ”To think one can Finlandize a totalitarian country is pure fantasy.”
- 1986, Jerry F. Hough, “Conclusion”, in The Struggle for the Third World: Soviet Debates and American Options, Brookings Institution, →ISBN, page 283:
- Americans seem extremely afraid that the Soviet Union could “Finlandize” solidly capitalist countries in Western Europe (that is, make their foreign policy accommodating without changing their domestic system), but they have no sense that they might Finlandize Nicaragua, let alone Cuba.
- 2017, “The Sonnenfeldt Doctrine: A Plan to Finlandize Eastern Europe”, in The Polish Quarterly of International Affairs, number 3, pages 115–129:
- 2023 April 5, Ronald Suny, The Conversation[1], retrieved 2024-09-09:
- In hindsight, hopes that Ukraine could “Finlandize” or federalize were both casualties of Putin’s increasingly hard line toward Ukraine.