Zürcher Nachrichten - 'Now it's for real': Ukraine war puts Sweden's military on alert

EUR -
AED 3.871072
AFN 71.976156
ALL 98.077879
AMD 410.799551
ANG 1.905924
AOA 961.20456
ARS 1056.441181
AUD 1.630748
AWG 1.891844
AZN 1.786299
BAM 1.955322
BBD 2.135168
BDT 126.3691
BGN 1.957284
BHD 0.396933
BIF 3123.173384
BMD 1.053952
BND 1.417761
BOB 7.307109
BRL 6.112396
BSD 1.057446
BTN 88.845575
BWP 14.456808
BYN 3.460637
BYR 20657.464826
BZD 2.131569
CAD 1.484792
CDF 3019.573232
CHF 0.935273
CLF 0.037421
CLP 1032.567891
CNY 7.630718
CNH 7.637728
COP 4664.445018
CRC 538.199038
CUC 1.053952
CUP 27.929736
CVE 110.238045
CZK 25.260096
DJF 188.304849
DKK 7.458507
DOP 63.718047
DZD 140.422326
EGP 51.99895
ERN 15.809284
ETB 128.067276
FJD 2.398742
FKP 0.831902
GBP 0.834298
GEL 2.882553
GGP 0.831902
GHS 16.892629
GIP 0.831902
GMD 74.830427
GNF 9113.463326
GTQ 8.167003
GYD 221.132781
HKD 8.204802
HNL 26.70699
HRK 7.518115
HTG 139.026558
HUF 407.610787
IDR 16709.517651
ILS 3.930394
IMP 0.831902
INR 88.934655
IQD 1385.254705
IRR 44363.488335
ISK 145.118599
JEP 0.831902
JMD 167.948494
JOD 0.747362
JPY 162.78822
KES 136.434327
KGS 91.171151
KHR 4272.279626
KMF 491.747778
KPW 948.556659
KRW 1470.000363
KWD 0.324132
KYD 0.881293
KZT 525.516487
LAK 23236.208036
LBP 94695.695716
LKR 308.93739
LRD 194.568732
LSL 19.238305
LTL 3.112047
LVL 0.637525
LYD 5.164762
MAD 10.542272
MDL 19.214211
MGA 4919.007226
MKD 61.594939
MMK 3423.195916
MNT 3581.329815
MOP 8.479386
MRU 42.21568
MUR 49.961528
MVR 16.283409
MWK 1833.738607
MXN 21.461684
MYR 4.710149
MZN 67.34931
NAD 19.238578
NGN 1756.706829
NIO 38.913439
NOK 11.682792
NPR 142.15796
NZD 1.799429
OMR 0.405403
PAB 1.057426
PEN 4.014418
PGK 4.252182
PHP 61.893386
PKR 293.611078
PLN 4.316515
PYG 8251.021599
QAR 3.854957
RON 4.977185
RSD 116.977276
RUB 105.337919
RWF 1452.427536
SAR 3.958644
SBD 8.843101
SCR 14.586817
SDG 633.94629
SEK 11.565282
SGD 1.41579
SHP 0.831902
SLE 23.821253
SLL 22100.857474
SOS 604.386622
SRD 37.22085
STD 21814.68442
SVC 9.252825
SYP 2648.08659
SZL 19.231845
THB 36.651713
TJS 11.27243
TMT 3.699373
TND 3.336284
TOP 2.46846
TRY 36.324813
TTD 7.180312
TWD 34.311415
TZS 2798.243053
UAH 43.681084
UGX 3880.995782
USD 1.053952
UYU 45.378043
UZS 13535.690246
VES 48.23969
VND 26757.213687
VUV 125.127333
WST 2.942204
XAF 655.827749
XAG 0.034502
XAU 0.000408
XCD 2.848359
XDR 0.796624
XOF 655.799755
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.356327
ZAR 19.123184
ZMK 9486.838739
ZMW 29.032763
ZWL 339.372206
  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    6.82

    +0.59%

  • RBGPF

    61.8400

    61.84

    +100%

  • NGG

    0.3800

    62.75

    +0.61%

  • CMSD

    0.0822

    24.44

    +0.34%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    60.98

    +0.9%

  • AZN

    -1.8100

    63.23

    -2.86%

  • GSK

    -0.6509

    33.35

    -1.95%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    24.57

    +0.08%

  • BTI

    0.9000

    36.39

    +2.47%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    13.23

    -0.3%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    8.77

    +1.03%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    28.98

    -0.24%

  • BCC

    -0.2600

    140.09

    -0.19%

  • JRI

    0.0235

    13.1

    +0.18%

  • RELX

    -1.5000

    44.45

    -3.37%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    26.82

    -0.07%

'Now it's for real': Ukraine war puts Sweden's military on alert
'Now it's for real': Ukraine war puts Sweden's military on alert / Photo: Jonathan NACKSTRAND - AFP

'Now it's for real': Ukraine war puts Sweden's military on alert

A new and more serious reality looms large for Sweden's conscripts as their military service now takes place in the shadow of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Text size:

The war has seen Sweden drastically ramp up its military readiness and take the "historic" step this week to apply for NATO membership, reversing two centuries of military non-alignment.

"You realise this is actually for real -- I'm not here on some year-long summer camp," says Axel Bystrom, a 20-year-old conscript on Sweden's strategic Baltic Sea island of Gotland.

"Now it's for real and that makes you more serious," added the young squad leader with the P18 regiment, which was only re-established in 2018.

Breaking off branches from nearby spruces, Bystrom and his fellow soldiers meticulously cover three armoured vehicles to camouflage them.

"You are working to be as good as you possibly can all the time, because you are thinking, 'this could be a reality. We may have to use it'," the native of Visby, Gotland's medieval main town, tells AFP.

More military exercises are also being held across Sweden.

- War games -

Sweden has long had a fear of Russia. With the end of the Cold War, the country made swingeing cuts to its defence spending.

But following Moscow's annexation of Crimea in 2014, it decided to rearm and hike spending, reintroducing mandatory military service in 2017.

As only a fraction of the population is called up and avoiding service is quite easy, conscripts like Bystrom tend to be highly motivated.

Spooked by Russia's assault on Ukraine, Sweden has announced a dramatic increase in defence spending, targeting two percent of GDP "as soon as possible", up from around 1.5 percent expected in the next few years.

Overall, Sweden's armed forces consist of some 55,000 people, including the Home Guard and part-time employees -- around 23,600 are part of the regular forces.

For many Swedes, Gotland is a popular summer holiday destination known for its sandy beaches on a sleepy island of 60,000 people.

But it is also less than 350 kilometres (217 miles) from the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad.

"Gotland is situated in the middle of the Baltic Sea. So if you own Gotland, you can pretty much control the air and naval movements in the Baltic Sea," P18 commander Magnus Frykvall explains.

A common theory is that in a conflict Russia would want to seize the island and install its S-400 surface-to-air missile defence system, effectively blocking off most of the southern Baltic Sea.

The Gotland regiment is still growing. According to Frykvall, they can now field around 800 soldiers and plan to increase numbers to 4,000 during wartime.

The uptick has been accelerated after Russian President Vladimir Putin "made it clear that he is willing to use military force to gain his political goals".

At its peak during the Cold War, some 25,000 troops and reserves were stationed on Gotland -- more than six times the amount planned for now.

But the planned boost in artillery and anti-aircraft systems means the regiment would "probably" be enough to "meet any threat."

If Sweden's NATO application -- currently facing diplomatic hurdles from Turkey -- were accepted, it would deter anyone from attacking Gotland, according to Frykvall.

"Thirty-two countries are much stronger than one," he says, referring to NATO's guiding principle that an attack on one member is seen as an attack on all.

- 'Make Gardens Not War' -

For residents living near the regiment, the increased military activity has been very noticeable.

"We have machine gun fire, we have explosions, we have artillery shots, shots from tanks as well," says Robert Hall, a local Green Party politician.

"We have tanks moving in and out of the military area and on the road 17 metres in front of our house, so we hear a lot of noise a lot of the time", he says.

In an eye-catching contrast, the ecological commune he helped found lies just across from the entrance to the military area.

Next to the sign for the "Suderbyn Ecovillage", a giant banner shows a tank overgrown with plants and reading "Make Gardens Not War".

For Hall, who is originally from California, the nature of the whole island has gone through a dramatic shift since he first came.

"We moved here in 1995 and there was still a lot of euphoria on the island about the fall of the Iron Curtain," he says.

"Gotland really wanted to position itself as the neutral meeting place in the middle of the Baltic Sea."

That idea has now instead given way to a new line of division.

"We're back to where we were before 1989, with a divided sea, even though it's not quite divided in the same location anymore," Hall said.

D.Smith--NZN