Abstract
This section deals with four countries which all chose different paths to obtain security during the Cold War: Two of them, Denmark and Norway, became members of NATO, and would henceforth be known in strategic and military planning as NATO’s ‘Northern Flank’. Of the other two, Sweden chose “non-alignment in peace with a view to neutrality in war”. Finland, eschewing any formal definition of its status, practised a form of pragmatic non-alignment, which President Kekkonen usually referred to as Finland’s policy of neutrality.
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