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Unearthed posts show Dem Senate hopeful praising vulgar graffiti, making crude porta-potty admission

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Editor’s note: This story contains graphic language.

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FIRST ON FOX: Democratic Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner, who is already facing criticism over past Reddit posts, made graphic sexual comments on his now-deleted account about masturbating in portable toilets and explicit graffiti found in military restrooms.

In one March 2017 post on Reddit’s r/Military forum, Platner responded to a discussion about nostalgic military smells by writing: «I still have to jerk off every time I sit in a portas—-er… that blue water smell conditioned me.» 

The archived posts were made under «P-Hustle,» a now-deleted Reddit account that Platner previously acknowledged was his.

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In another post from March 2021 on Reddit’s r/USMC forum, Platner described a crude penis drawing inside a portable toilet while deployed overseas.

DELETED POSTS URGING VIOLENCE HAUNT DEMOCRATIC SENATE HOPEFUL IN MAINE RACE

Senate candidate Graham Platner speaks at a town hall at the Leavitt Theater in Ogunquit, Maine, on Oct. 22, 2025. (Sophie Park/Getty Images)

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Responding to a thread dedicated to so-called «GWOT Dick Art,» Platner launched into an extended monologue praising the explicit graffiti in unusually vivid terms, calling it «beautiful,» «engorged and veiny,» and moving «towards its penetrative glory.»

«Oh s***!!!,» Platner wrote. «You’ve got the Hot Rod C*** from Manas!»

Manas was a major U.S. military transit hub in Kyrgyzstan used during the wars in Afghanistan. Platner enlisted in the Marines in 2003 and served three combat tours in Iraq. In 2010, he joined the Maryland Army National Guard for a fourth tour, serving in the infantry in Afghanistan. He returned to Afghanistan eight years later as a security contractor.

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PLATNER CALLED PTSD EXCUSE ‘BULL—-‘ IN 2020 POST, NOW CITES HIS OWN STRUGGLE TO EXPLAIN ONLINE CONTROVERSIES

The post accompanied a photograph of a smiling serviceman posing beside the explicit illustration inside the portable restroom.

«I sat there in sheer awe,» Platner wrote. «The soul filling joy to be allowed to witness such glory.»

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Fox News Digital reached out to Platner’s campaign for comment on Monday.

Platner has previously responded to questions about his controversial posts by suggesting he was joking.

«You should read the comments in context. It’s very clear I’m joking,» he previously told Fox News Digital when asked about them. «It’s called s***posting. It’s when you argue with people on the internet and try to bother them. So, yeah, no, it’s very obviously not true.»

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The posts, which are accessible in the Maine Monitor’s archive but have not been previously reported, are the latest in a series of vulgar and inflammatory social media comments that critics say raise questions about Platner’s judgment as the progressive Democrat emerges as his party’s Senate nominee in Maine.

BERNIE SANDERS DEFENDS MAINE SENATE CANDIDATE UNDER FIRE FOR REDDIT COMMENTS

Republicans are likely to use the resurfaced posts, along with others, to portray Platner as too erratic and extreme for statewide office as Democrats rally behind the first-time candidate.

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Mehek Cooke, a GOP strategist and senior national security and legal analyst for the Daily Signal, told Fox News Digital that, politically, Platner’s «vulgar» posts will «matter» to voters because they are «deciding whether Graham Platner has the judgment, temperament, and basic decency to represent Maine in the Senate.»

«His campaign has been built around authenticity and moral seriousness. These posts undercut both,» Cooke said. «Platner is not a truth-teller. He is someone whose instincts appear crude, reckless, and deeply unserious. And by the way, if they were really ‘jokes,’ why delete the posts? That sounds less like humor and more like a CYA cleanup operation.»

Cooke said that «one tasteless post» can be chalked up to «immaturity» but a «years-long trail of vulgar, sexually degrading, and slur-filled commentary is a character issue.»

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Platner, a first-time candidate who is backed by progressive champions Sens. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, became the Democrats’ presumptive nominee after his rival for the nomination, two-term Gov. Janet Mills, ended her campaign last month after trailing Platner in polling and fundraising.

Other posts Platner has been questioned about, including in a recent interview with the New York Times, include a 2013 post, which Platner later deleted, that people concerned about rape should not «get so f—ed up they wind up having sex with someone they don’t mean to.»

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Graham Platner pointing to a covered tattoo on his arm during an interview in Portland, Maine

Graham Platner, a Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate in Maine, points to a covered tattoo that was previously recognized as a Nazi symbol during an interview in Portland, Maine, on Oct. 22, 2025. (WGME via AP)

Platner has also faced scrutiny for more recent Reddit posts, including one from five years ago in which he described himself as a «communist» and «socialist.» Additionally, Platner’s posts have contained alleged homophobic slurs and praise for military tactics used by Hamas.

«Will every Democrat in Maine care? No,» Cooke said. «Platner has shown he can survive controversy inside a Democratic primary. But in a general election, especially against Susan Collins, the cumulative effect of his stances, controversies, and comments matters. The Nazi-linked tattoo controversy, the homophobic slurs, the disturbing comments that have already surfaced, and now these posts create a fuller picture of a morally bankrupt candidate. Republicans will argue this is not a candidate with a few regrettable moments. This is a pattern that tells voters something fundamental about his character. And character still matters to a lot of Mainers.»

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Obama-appointed judge who blocked Trump birthright citizenship order strikes again, throws out visa overhaul

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An Obama-appointed federal judge who previously blocked President Donald Trump’s birthright citizenship executive order has again dealt a major setback to the administration by striking down Trump’s $100,000 H-1B visa payment requirement and declaring the policy unlawful.

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U.S. District Judge Leo Sorokin of Massachusetts ruled Monday that the Trump administration lacked the authority to impose the hefty payment on employers seeking new H-1B visas, finding that the requirement amounted to a tax that only Congress has the constitutional power to impose.

In Monday’s 42-page decision, Sorokin sided with a coalition of 20 states that challenged Trump’s September 2025 proclamation creating a new $100,000 payment requirement for employers filing petitions for foreign workers under the H-1B visa program, which allows U.S. employers to hire skilled foreign workers. Approximately 65,000 foreign workers are issued a H-1B visa each year.

TRUMP’S $100K H-1B VISA OVERHAUL COULD HIT TECH GIANTS LIKE AMAZON AND MICROSOFT HARDEST

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U.S. President Donald Trump during an executive order signing in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, June 3, 2026. (Shawn Thew/EPA/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Before Trump’s proclamation, employers typically paid between $2,000 and $5,000 in filing fees to sponsor an H-1B worker, depending on the type of application and the size of the company.

The administration had argued that the measure was necessary to curb abuse of the visa system and protect American workers.

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Trump’s proclamation stated that the H-1B program had been exploited to replace U.S. workers with lower-paid foreign labor and that the new payment would help address those concerns.

Sorokin rejected the administration’s legal justification, finding that the Immigration and Nationality Act gives presidents broad authority over the entry of noncitizens but does not authorize them to impose taxes.

«While the Executive has broad discretion over the admission and exclusion of aliens, … that discretion is not boundless,» Sorokin wrote, referring to previous case law.

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Sorokin concluded that the payment functioned as a tax rather than a permissible immigration restriction.

TRUMP IS DOWN BUT NOT OUT IN COURT BATTLE OVER HARVARD’S FOREIGN STUDENT VISAS

«The Court finds that the Policy imposes a tax on H-1B petitions without the requisite delegation by Congress,» Sorokin wrote.

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He further rejected the administration’s argument that the payment requirement was simply another immigration restriction, bluntly stating: «Taxes are not ‘restrictions.’»

Beyond the constitutional concerns, Sorokin also found that federal agencies violated the Administrative Procedure Act by implementing the policy without notice-and-comment rule making and concluded that the agencies exceeded their statutory authority.

As a remedy, Sorokin declared the policy unlawful and vacated it in its entirety.

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Signage for the US Department of State outside headquarters building in Washington DC

Signage for the U.S. Department of State is displayed outside its headquarters in the Foggy Bottom neighborhood of Washington, D.C., on April 15, 2025. (Jim Watson/AFP)

Sorokin, a Yale and Columbia Law School graduate, was nominated to the federal bench by President Barack Obama in 2013 and confirmed by the Senate in 2014. Last year, Sorokin was the fourth judge to issue a nationwide injunction blocking Trump’s executive order seeking to limit birthright citizenship. He ruled that the policy is likely unconstitutional under the 14th Amendment. That dispute has since reached the Supreme Court, and a ruling is expected in the coming weeks.

The administration is expected to appeal Sorokin’s decision, setting up another legal battle over the scope of presidential authority in immigration matters and the limits of executive power.

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«President Trump has clear legal authority to restrict entry of any class of aliens he determines is not in America’s best interests, and that is exactly what he did,» White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers told Fox News Digital. «The H-1B program has been abused for decades, and President Trump finally took action to fix it. A federal judge in Washington already upheld a nearly identical order, and the Administration is confident this order will be reversed on appeal.»

In a separate challenge filed in December 2025, U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell in Washington declined to block the policy after dismissing claims from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce that the additional H-1B charge violated federal immigration law.

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Tensión en el Báltico: la OTAN derribó un dron que ingresó al espacio aéreo de Letonia procedente de Rusia

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Un dron interceptor durante una demostración de capacidades de defensa aérea en un campo de entrenamiento de la OTAN en Letonia (REUTERS/Archivo)

Un avión de combate francés que opera bajo mando de la OTAN derribó este lunes un dron que había penetrado en el espacio aéreo de Letonia tras aproximarse desde territorio ruso.

Según informó el ministro de Defensa letón, Raivis Melnis, la decisión de neutralizar la aeronave fue tomada por el mando de la OTAN después de evaluar la situación en la zona. El aparato fue destruido cerca de la localidad de Berzgale, a pocos kilómetros de la frontera con Rusia. Las autoridades indicaron que no hubo víctimas ni daños materiales.

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De acuerdo con información oficial, los aviones despegaron desde la base aérea de Siauliai, en el norte de Lituania, y derribaron el dron alrededor de las 10:00 de la mañana, hora local.

El Ejército letón señaló que se trató de “un vehículo aéreo no tripulado extranjero que ingresó al espacio aéreo letón como resultado de la guerra electrónica rusa”.

La ministra de Relaciones Exteriores de Letonia, Baiba Braze, agradeció la actuación de las fuerzas aliadas y escribió en redes sociales: “¡Gracias a nuestros aliados franceses por derribar el dron que ingresó al espacio aéreo letón!”.

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Aunque todavía no se ha precisado el modelo del dron ni se ha determinado oficialmente quién lo operaba, el incidente marca un precedente para Letonia. De acuerdo con información publicada por The Washington Post, se trata de la primera ocasión en que la OTAN ordena el derribo de un dron sobre territorio letón.

La OTAN derribó un dron que ingresó al espacio aéreo de Letonia procedente de Rusia
La OTAN derribó un dron que ingresó al espacio aéreo de Letonia procedente de Rusia

Desde el inicio de la invasión rusa de Ucrania, los gobiernos de Europa del Este han denunciado repetidos incidentes relacionados con drones, misiles y operaciones de guerra electrónica cerca de sus fronteras.

Los últimos meses han estado marcados por varios episodios similares. Estonia, Lituania y Rumania han registrado incursiones o caídas de drones en zonas próximas a Ucrania, generando respuestas de emergencia y cuestionamientos sobre la capacidad de defensa aérea de la región.

En Lituania, por ejemplo, una incursión aérea reciente provocó medidas extraordinarias de seguridad para proteger a las máximas autoridades del país. En Rumania, un dron impactó contra una zona residencial cercana a la frontera ucraniana y dejó varios heridos.

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El incidente de este lunes llega además en un momento particularmente sensible para Letonia. El país viene atravesando un intenso debate sobre la seguridad nacional después de varios episodios relacionados con aeronaves no tripuladas.

La preocupación se profundizó durante el período previo a las últimas elecciones nacionales, cuando diversos drones terminaron cayendo dentro del territorio letón. Aquellos hechos derivaron en una crisis política que desembocó en cambios dentro del Gobierno y cuestionamientos a la conducción del área de defensa.

Para los países bálticos —Letonia, Estonia y Lituania— la guerra en Ucrania representa una amenaza directa debido a su proximidad geográfica con Rusia y Bielorrusia. Los tres Estados integran la OTAN desde 2004 y han impulsado una política de fuerte respaldo a Kiev desde el inicio del conflicto.

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Secretario general de la OTAN, Mark Rutte
Secretario general de la OTAN, Mark Rutte

La misión aérea que permitió derribar el dron forma parte precisamente del dispositivo permanente de vigilancia que la alianza mantiene sobre el espacio aéreo báltico. Aviones de distintos países aliados rotan periódicamente para garantizar la protección de la región.

El episodio también volvió a abrir un debate estratégico dentro de Europa: cómo responder de manera eficaz al creciente uso de drones en conflictos modernos.

Según explicó The Washington Post, muchos gobiernos europeos consideran que utilizar aviones de combate y misiles de alto costo para destruir aparatos relativamente baratos plantea interrogantes sobre la sostenibilidad de estos sistemas de defensa.

Como respuesta, varios países han comenzado a invertir en nuevas tecnologías antidrones, sistemas de detección temprana y capacidades de guerra electrónica. Letonia, por ejemplo, planea desplegar más unidades especializadas a lo largo de su frontera con Rusia y Bielorrusia para interceptar amenazas de este tipo antes de que ingresen en profundidad a su territorio.

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Mientras continúan los ataques con drones tanto en Ucrania como dentro de Rusia, los países de la OTAN observan con atención cualquier incidente en sus fronteras. El derribo ocurrido este lunes en Letonia refleja hasta qué punto la guerra ha ampliado sus efectos más allá del campo de batalla y se ha convertido en una preocupación permanente para la seguridad europea.



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Finland’s foreign minister says Ukraine ‘is now holding the cards’ as Russia signals talks

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EXCLUSIVE: Finnish Foreign Minister Elina Valtonen said Ukraine has gained new leverage against Russia, arguing that Moscow’s renewed talk of negotiations comes as Kyiv has strengthened itself militarily, politically and diplomatically.

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Valtonen’s comments carry particular weight because Finland is one of NATO’s newest members and now sits on the alliance’s longest border with Russia. Finland joined NATO in April 2023 after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, ending decades of military nonalignment and transforming the country into a frontline state in Europe’s security posture.

«Ukraine certainly is now holding the cards,» Valtonen told Fox News Digital Monday in an interview at the United Nations headquarters in New York. «They have strengthened themselves immensely over the course of the past three, four months, both militarily and politically, diplomatically. And I think this opens a great window of opportunity for actually advancing the peace talks.»

UKRAINE MAKES FASTEST GAINS IN YEARS AS RUSSIA TALKS STALL, EXPLOITING CRACKS IN KREMLIN COMMAND

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Finland’s Foreign Minister Elina Valtonen at the United Nations headquarters in New York, June 8, 2026. (Efrat Lachter/ Fox News Digital)

Her assessment comes as Reuters reported that Ukraine’s top military commander said Ukrainian forces had recaptured more than 600 square kilometers, or roughly 230 square miles, of territory so far in 2026, a shift after years of slow Russian gains. It also follows renewed diplomatic activity, including Zelenskyy’s stated willingness to halt fighting along current lines as a path to talks and Putin’s public rejection of a direct meeting for now.

Finland shares a roughly 820-mile border with Russia, making it one of the alliance’s most strategically exposed members.

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Valtonen said Moscow has shown little willingness to make concessions and argued that the responsibility for ending the war remains with the Kremlin.

«So far, Russia hasn’t been willing to make any concessions, and essentially Russia could end the war today if they wanted to, because it was their war in the first place,» she said. «So I’m hopeful that this could be the right time to relaunch those talks.»

Peace efforts remain stalled over the same core divide that has shaped the war for years: Ukraine has called for a ceasefire and negotiations without surrendering territory, while Russia has continued to demand control over occupied Ukrainian regions. Putin said in early June there was «no point» in meeting Zelenskyy for now and repeated Moscow’s broader war aims.

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Asked about U.S.-led efforts to negotiate an end to the war, Valtonen praised Washington’s role but stressed that Ukraine alone must decide whether to accept any concessions, including on territory.

«I think the U.S. involvement in this entire process has been a very good one, and it’s important that the U.S. stays engaged, because at the end of the day, it’s about freedom, it’s the future of not only Europe, but also of global peace,» she said.

ZELENSKYY SAYS US WILL ONLY GUARANTEE UKRAINE’S SECURITY IF KYIV AGREES TO GIVE UP DONBAS

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Finnish President Alexander Stubb, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, U.S. President Donald Trump, French President Emmanuel Macron, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, and NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte standing together at the White House

Finnish President Alexander Stubb, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, U.S. President Donald Trump, French President Emmanuel Macron, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, and NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte prepare to depart after a group photo at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Aug. 18, 2025. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Valtonen said Europe also needs to be part of the process because Russia’s war directly affects the continent’s security architecture.

She said any serious negotiations would require Russia to accept a full ceasefire.

«First and foremost, we would need Russia at the table willing to end the war,» Valtonen said. «And that would need to happen through a full ceasefire, because only that would open the possibility for true negotiations.»

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Valtonen also credited President Donald Trump with pushing European allies to increase defense spending, saying the pressure had moved the continent in the right direction after years of imbalance inside NATO.

Finland has moved aggressively to increase defense spending. Helsinki plans to raise defense spending to 3.2% of GDP by 2030, up from 2.5% in 2025, Reuters reported in April. 

WHY NATO’S DEFENSE SPENDING IMBALANCE LASTED FOR DECADES

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Senior border guard officer Juho Pellinen looking at fence marking Finland Russia border near Pelkola crossing

Senior border guard officer Juho Pellinen looks at a fence marking the boundary between Finland and Russia near the Pelkola border crossing in Imatra, Finland, on Nov. 18, 2022. (Alessandro Rampazzo/AFP)

Secretary of State Marco Rubio also praised Finland and Sweden Tuesday during a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, saying the two newest NATO members had strengthened the alliance by bringing «their own defense industry» and «advanced technologies.» 

He called them «a great partner» and «an extraordinary partner.»

Valtonen said Finland’s approach is shaped by its own history with Moscow.

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«Finland obviously has taken the Russian threat extremely seriously because we have the longest border with them,» she said. «We certainly worship our status as the happiest country in the world, i.e. democracy, the rule of law and human rights, which we hold dear as values over anything that Russia could offer.»

She also pointed to Finland’s experience in World War II, when the Soviet Union invaded Finland, as a reminder of why deterrence matters.

«The last time the Soviet Union, i.e. Russia, tried to invade us was during the Second World War,» Valtonen said. «Happily, we were able to fend them off, but of course at the massive cost to the society.»

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«For us, it has been clear that if we invest in our deterrence, then that’s a signal to Russia — do not come here,» she added.

On Iran, Valtonen said Finnish President Alexander Stubb’s March comments, reported by The Guardian, that the conflict was not a NATO matter should not be understood as Europe washing its hands of the crisis.

«I don’t think our president meant that this has nothing to do with European countries or NATO allies,» Valtonen said. «I think what he probably meant more is that NATO obviously is not directly involved as an organization, which is true.»

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EX-NATO AMBASSADOR WARNS US AND ALLIES MUST ‘STOP THE SNIPING’ AND UNITE TO END IRAN CONFLICT

Swedish soldiers standing in formation at Berga naval base during military exercise Aurora 23

Swedish soldiers participate in the military exercise Aurora 23 at Berga naval base outside Stockholm on April 28, 2023. A Swedish parliamentary committee recommended on April 26, 2024, that Sweden increase its military budget by nearly $5 billion through 2030 to strengthen air defense and expand conscription after joining NATO. (Anders Wiklund/TT News Agency)

Her comments came after another weekend escalation in the Iran war, with Tehran launching missiles at Israel and Israel striking military targets in western and central Iran overnight. The flare-up unfolded as the U.S. and its allies continue efforts to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear state and keep pressure on Tehran over threats to Israel and regional shipping.

The Strait of Hormuz, a critical global energy choke point, has become a central focus for Western governments after Iranian threats and restrictions on maritime traffic. Reuters reported Monday that the European Union sanctioned Iranian-linked individuals and an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps navy unit over threats to shipping in the strait.

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«We as individual member states in Europe have definitely been helping the U.S. effort,» Valtonen said. «We don’t want to see Iran as a nuclear state. We know what kind of a threat Iran has projected towards the region, especially toward Israel.»

Valtonen added Finland has also joined efforts led by France and the United Kingdom to keep the Strait of Hormuz open once conditions allow for safe operations in the area.

«It’s so important that such straits are not weaponized by any country around the world,» Valtonen said.

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Asked whether European countries had refused U.S. requests to use bases during the Iran crisis, Valtonen said Finland has no U.S. bases to shut down but argued that most European allies have supported Washington’s requests.

«Finland has been helping the U.S. through so many ways,» she said. «We don’t have any U.S. bases in Finland, so there’s nothing we can shut down.»

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Finnish Army

Commander of the Finnish Army Lieutenant General Pasi Valimaki addresses Finnish conscript soldiers after a military exercise at Pori Brigade in Niinisalo, Finland, Dec. 9, 2025. (Anne Kauranen/Reuters)

«But having said this, the vast majority of European countries have said yes to everything that the U.S. has asked during the past couple of months when this war effort has been ongoing, independent of the fact that, of course, we are not directly involved as countries in the war,» she added.

Valtonen said that support demonstrated NATO allies’ willingness to help Washington even when the alliance itself is not formally involved.

«I think that really shows the engagement by NATO allies in this and our willingness to help when the U.S. really needs some assistance,» she said.

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