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by mopsi 917 days ago
When someone says "military base", then most people imagine barracks full of life, tanks and IFVs being worked on in garages, people coming and going, groups of soldiers doing their PT in the background like in establishing shots of Hollywood movies. Guarded warehouses in the middle of nowhere are none of that.

And defense agreements that establish exceptions from local laws are nothing out of ordinary either. For example, the agreement between Finland and Sweden stipulates that visiting forces are excluded from customs procedures related to weapons, explosives and other dangerous goods.

The Finnish-American one is much more detailed and goes into weeds like excluding vehicles transported by the US into Finland from car tax and VAT. :) It's common sense, but countries that are ruled by law must have these things written down.

1 comments

Guarded warehouses in the middle of nowhere give at least as wrong image as military base. The areas are mostly next to Finnish military bases and USA will be taking over some Finnish military infrastructure. And the DCA allows for permanent US troops there.

My hunch is that the word "base" is avoided because the public opinion on even NATO bases is split at best, and I'm quite sure US bases are significantly less popular.