Sweden reintroduces conscription amid security worries and soldier shortage
2017-03-03 09:05:39 GMT+86720km to Beijing
EditorXie Zhenqi
Sweden is to reintroduce military conscription next year due to difficulties filling the ranks on a voluntary basis at a time of increased security concerns, the defense minister said on Thursday.
Non-aligned Sweden ended compulsory military service in 2010 but military activity in the Baltic region has increased since then, prompting Sweden to step up its military preparedness.
"We have a Russian annexation of Crimea, we have the aggression in Ukraine, we have more exercise activities in our neighborhood. So we have decided to build a stronger national defense," Defense Minister Peter Hultqvist told Reuters. "The decision to activate conscription is part of that."
Sweden's Defense Minister Peter Hultqvist speaks at a news conference in Baghdad, Iraq, on November 2, 2015. / Reuters Photo
Military service was the norm for young Swedish men during the Cold War but conscription was gradually watered down after the collapse of the Soviet Union as war in the region looked increasingly unlikely.
But a resurgent Russia and tensions over the conflict in Ukraine have left politicians on both sides of the aisle looking to boost military capability and address the lack of talent keen on making a career as a professional soldier.
Signs of the lack of military preparedness have cropped up in recent years, as when Russian warplanes carrying out a mock bombing run on Sweden in 2013 caught air defenses napping.
Swedish armed forces soldiers attend a rehearsal in front of the Royal Palace in Stockholm, Sweden on June 18, 2010. / Reuters Photo
'Odd and old-fashioned'
The government's decision entails the call-up of 4,000 men and women for military training per year in 2018 and 2019 and Hultqvist said motivation would be an important factor when selecting the recruits for service.
Sofia Hultgren, who turns 17 later this year and thus could be drafted in coming years, said many young Swedes viewed lengthy careers as military professionals as something odd and old-fashioned.
Still, she welcomed the reintroduction of military service and said she would consider such training even if she did not want to make it a career.
Young recruits are pictured during an inspection on March 2, 2017 at the regiment in Enkoping, 70 km north-west of Stockholm. / CFP Photo
A government investigation last year found that with unemployment near zero among the talented youngsters the armed forces targets, only about 2,500 were recruited annually while the military needed 4,000.
The wages for professional soldiers run well below the national average for the age group, providing little monetary incentive, while the pool of potential recruits, primarily former conscripts from before 2010, has steadily shrunk.
"This buffer is now exhausted and that leaves great challenges in recruiting," said Johan Osterberg, a researcher in staffing at the Swedish Defense University.
The Swedish government has just decided to reintroduce conscription, scrapped since 2010, by calling up men and women born between 1999 and 2000 for selection. /CFP Photo
Swedish military expenditure has fallen from 2.5 percent of GDP in 1991, around the time the Soviet Union collapsed, to 1.1 percent of GDP in 2015, data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) showed.
Sweden, which is not a NATO member, has since increased spending and reassigned troops to the Baltic Sea island of Gotland besides urging local governments to step up contingency planning for a future war.