A damning new report by The Times has revealed that U.S. military forces were “humiliated” by Finnish reservists during a major NATO exercise in the Arctic, forcing commanders to intervene to save American morale. The incident, which took place during the “Joint Viking” maneuvers in northern Norway, has exposed a critical gap in cold-weather warfare capabilities between the United States and its Nordic allies.

The “Massacre” on Snow
According to military sources cited by The Times, Finnish reservists—civilians who train part-time—were tasked with playing the “opposing force” (OPFOR) against a contingent of regular U.S. Army and Marine Corps units. The result was a rout so lopsided that it disrupted the training objectives.
The Finnish unit, utilizing indigenous knowledge of the terrain, ski mobility, and specialized winter survival tactics, repeatedly ambushed and neutralized their American counterparts. The domination was so total that exercise directors reportedly had to issue a “stop order” to the Finnish command.
“The Finns had to be told to stop beating up on the Americans because it was humiliating and demoralizing,” a source told the newspaper. “They were hitting them from everywhere, disappearing into the white, and the Americans literally couldn’t function. It wasn’t a fight; it was a hazing.”
A Capabilities Gap
The incident has sparked alarm within NATO regarding the U.S. military’s readiness for high-latitude conflict. While the U.S. maintains superior global logistics and firepower, its individual soldiers and tactical units appear woefully unprepared for the brutal realities of Arctic warfare compared to local forces.
The report highlights that Nordic troops (Finland, Norway, Sweden) and the British Royal Marines operate comfortably in conditions where American equipment freezes and troops struggle merely to survive, let alone fight. Key deficiencies identified include:
* Mobility: Finnish troops on skis moved rapidly across deep snow, while U.S. forces, often relying on heavy vehicles or foot patrols, bogged down.
* Survival: U.S. troops reportedly struggled with basic thermal regulation and hydration in sub-zero temperatures, degrading their combat effectiveness before shots were even fired.
* Camouflage: The Finns mastered “white-out” concealment, while U.S. signature management was described as “clumsy” against the snowy backdrop.

Strategic Implications
The revelation comes as the Arctic heats up as a contested geopolitical theater, with Russia expanding its northern military footprint. The Joint Viking exercise was intended to demonstrate NATO’s ability to defend its northern flank. Instead, it seemingly demonstrated that without heavy reliance on Finnish and Norwegian proxies, U.S. power projection in the High North is brittle.
“We have the ships and the planes,” one NATO analyst noted. “But if you put an American battalion in the woods against a Finnish reservist company in January, the Finns will win every time. That is a problem we have to fix.”








