Thanks for your comments, everybody.
@Degrasse:
I’m confused from your game description, did Germany declare war on G1 but then not follow through with an effective attack? If not, on the European map wouldn’t Russia be restricted by the neutrality rules from attacking Finland?
It was a face to face game, and I have no recorded data about it. But Germany never declared war at all, and I finally declared war myself on R4. Because I was just playing Russia, there had been very little to do so far for me, so I was more than happy to finally see some action.
Now in this game, the German play was rather unconvincing, as if he could never decide on where to focus his efforts. He didn’t take out the entire British fleet G1 but still kept trying and also spent quite a bit of money in the Mediterranean, so by the time the fight against Russia finally started, Russia had become quite strong. We didn’t finish it, but an Allied victory was inevitable. So my attack on Finland worked quite well indeed, but that was probably the result of hesitant German play.
But that wasn’t not a very typical game of course. My question would be, whether Russia could also afford an invasion of Finland and Norway in a “normal” game with a G2 DOW. Particularly, what I did was not just take out the Finnish troops, but take them out with everything I had available. So R1, I moved everybody from Novgorod and Vyborg to Karelia, and my planes to Novgorod. My plan was to attack Finland if he would have declared war G2, not just to do as much damage as possible and suffer fewer casualties that Germany, but also to have enough survivors to discourage a German amphibious response (he didn’t buy any transports G1). And of course, the UK could land a few planes there to further protect those units.
Also, once he took Novgorod (which he did), the force in Norway/Finland was still strong enough to be a threat, compelling him to maintain a force in Novgorod.
But the downside of all that is, that a rather large Russian force (11 inf 1 art) has been moved in the wrong direction to defend Moscow. If the Germans move fast enough, they may be able to take Moscow before the Russians benefit from the income shift (which in itself is huge, at 21 IPC).