Majority of Estonias will defend their country, but worry more about misinformation than an invasion

by · EUobserver

Freedom square in Tallinn, Estonia. Foto N – Tomáš Hrivňák

EU and the World

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By Tomáš Hrivňák,
Bratislava
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This story is a part of the weekly newsletter about economy, defence, and tech in the eastern flank of Nato, How we cee it.

As Russia’s war against Ukraine rages into its fifth year — with stray drones, aircraft incursions and threats felt across the Baltics — the question of whether citizens are willing to defend their country is becoming increasingly important. For countries like Estonia, it has been a key research focus for years.

The latest results of the annual survey published by the Estonian ministry of defence came in on Monday (1 June). They show that while Estonians’ willingness to take part in defending the country remains high overall. However, the biggest perceived threats are misinformation and cyberattacks, not a big military conflict.

A clear majority of Estonia’s population, 81 percent, believes the country should mount armed resistance if attacked by another state, regardless of the attacker.

About 62 percent said they would be willing to take part in the defence according to their abilities and skills, unchanged from the previous two years. Willingness is markedly higher among ethnic Estonians (69 percent) than among residents of other ethnicities (48 percent).

Of those willing to participate, 14 percent say they would take part in direct military defence, while 42 percent would assume a supporting role such as logistics or rear-area assistance.

Set against the wider context of central and eastern Europe, Estonians’ willingness to defend their homeland sits somewhere in the middle, according to data collected by the Bratislava-based think tank Globsec in early 2025.

Poland shows the highest willingness, at 84 percent, followed by the Czech Republic (81 percent), Hungary (78 percent) and Romania (76 percent). Estonia, at 63 percent, ranks behind Latvia (67 percent) but ahead of Lithuania (60 percent), Bulgaria (59 percent) and Slovakia, which closes the ranking at 49 percent.

Looking across the Gulf of Finland, the 2025 Finnish survey conducted by the Advisory Board for Defence Information found that 78 percent of Finns believe the country should be defended by arms even if the outcome is uncertain, and 80 percent expressed personal willingness to take part in defence tasks.

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Freedom square in Tallinn, Estonia. Foto N – Tomáš Hrivňák

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Author Bio

Tomáš Hrivňák is an economy reporter for Denník N. He studied Media Analysis and Research at Masaryk University and previously worked as a photojournalist. His reporting and photography have earned multiple awards, including the Slovak Press Photo and a Journalism Award for written reportage.

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