Finland, Estonia start cooperation on AI research development
Published : 01 Jul 2026, 02:33
The Finnish Ministry of Defence, the Estonian Defence Forces, and the European AI lab for Defence NestAI on Tuesday signed a Letter of Intent (LOI) to advance the development of artificial intelligence capabilities, said the Finnish Defence Forces in a press release.
The LOI does not include financial commitments. Instead, it establishes a framework for knowledge sharing, joint development, training, and technical cooperation.
At the core of the cooperation are the Finnish Defence Forces AI Center of Expertice and the Estonian Force Transformation Command (FTC), which have similar responsibilities in the field of AI development.
The objective is to build a shared network for AI expertise and development that supports the enhancement of defence capabilities while enabling broader international and industry cooperation in the future.
Such cooperation will facilitate the sharing of best practices and may help distribute workloads and reduce duplication of effort among participating organisations.
Initially, the cooperation will focus on the research and development of adaptive and learning AI, command and control support solutions, and autonomous and unmanned systems.
The cooperation will be launched in phases
“Last year, we launched the Finnish Defence Forces Data and AI Strategy. This Letter of Intent is one element of the strategy’s objective to build a national and international ecosystem around data and artificial intelligence. Our goal is to bring additional nations into this cooperation, and the partnership now beginning with Estonia provides an excellent starting point. At the same time, we are developing capabilities that are interoperable with those of our allies,” said Major General Sami Nurmi, Deputy Chief of Staff, Strategy of the Defence Command Finland.
"The Letter of Intent establishes a basis for practical cooperation in military artificial intelligence. The integration of operational insight, technical expertise, and shared lessons from testing is expected to accelerate the responsible adoption of AI in areas such as command and control (C2), unmanned systems, and adaptive decision-support capabilities. Interoperability with allies and cooperation with industry is critical, and that open architectures will facilitate the development of solutions capable of integration across diverse systems while preserving sovereign control over data, technology, and operational application,” Major General Viktor Kalnitski, Deputy Commander of the Estonian Defence Forces said.
“By working directly with the Finnish and Estonian Defence Forces, we ensure that the AI being developed is shaped by those who will use it in the field, and that European allies retain sovereign control over how their capabilities evolve,” said Peter Sarlin, Executive chairman of NestAI.
