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With Russia’s threat coming

Michael Kahn

PRAGUE (Reuters) – Estonia is a Baltic Sea with 1.4 million people and has long weighed far more than it has in the technology sector, and now leads Central and Eastern Europe eager to fund Russia’s defense program in 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

It is not difficult to see the reason.

Although intensified security issues have promoted defense investment throughout Europe, Russia’s threats in Estonia and its Baltic neighbors, which spent decades under the Soviet era and Russian rule.

“Philosophically, Estonians will consider how to defend the country every day,” said Sten Tamkivi, a tech entrepreneur.

The early Skype executive told Reuters that the war prompted him and his London partners to use their 800 million euro investment platform plural – including Transferwise co-founder Taavet Hinrikus – the defense project and others supporting European sovereignty.

“We never thought of defending, but the tension on the eastern side of NATO is tactile,” Tamkivi said.

“We need to first address urgent national defense issues,” he said.

For example, in July last year, plural joins a €450 million C financing from German AI company Helsing, which uses data to enhance defense, intelligence and national security systems and has completed another defense agreement so far in 2025.

According to Dealroom.co, the share of European defense technology investment has risen from just 0.4% in 2024 to 1.7% of venture capital funds to nearly $1 billion.

Dealroom.co data shows that since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, most of the funds have flowed to Western Europe, but the amount of funds in Central and Eastern Europe has tripled.

EU member Estonia plays an important role in its eastern side. Home to several tech unicorns, these startups hit $1 billion valuations, such as Skype, Bolt, Transferwise and others – it has minted dozens of wealthy tech executives with financial giants to support emerging ones defense company.

Its distance from Ukraine also allows for close cooperation with first-line units there to quickly test and adjust the technology, while privately funded groups in the Baltic countries are able to invest in purely military technology. In contrast, in Poland – the largest economy in the region and a major provider of military aid to Kiev – many venture capital firms have obtained public funds, which prevents them from directly funding military projects.

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