Toronto Star

Sweden reinstates military draft

About 4,000 men and women could be called up each year as tensions rise in Europe

- JAN M. OLSEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

COPENHAGEN— Sweden’s left-leaning government instituted a military draft for both men and women Thursday because of what its defence minister called a deteriorat­ing security environmen­t in Europe and around Sweden.

Sweden abolished compulsory military service for men in 2010 because there were enough volunteers to meet its military needs. It has never had a military draft for women.

The government said “the all-volunteer recruitmen­t hasn’t provided the Armed Forces with enough trained personnel. The reactivati­ng of conscripti­on is needed for military readiness.” In September, non-NATO-member Sweden stationed permanent troops on the Baltic Sea island of Gotland. Defence Minister Peter Hultqvist described the move as sending a signal after Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and its “increasing pressure” on the neighbouri­ng Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

There have also been reports of airspace violations by Russia’s military aircraft in the Baltics and a military buildup in the Russian exclave of Kaliningra­d, which sits across the Baltic Sea from Sweden.

About 20,000 people now work for the Swedish armed forces, 84 per cent of them men and 16 per cent women, according to the forces’ website. But the armed forces lack 1,000 active troops as well as 7,000 reservists, according to Sweden’s coalition government of Social Democrats and Greens.

Under the plan approved Thursday, at least 4,000 18-year-olds could be called up each year. Swedes will still be able to volunteer for military service.

The Swedish government, which often has described itself as “feminist,” said “modern conscripti­on is gender neutral and will include both women and men.”

Hultqvist said he had been inspired by neighbouri­ng Norway, which in 2013 introduced a law applying military conscripti­on to both sexes. That made Norway the first NATO member to draft both men and women, joining a tiny group of countries around the world, including Israel.

Conscripti­on was introduced in Sweden in 1901, put had gradually wound down and was formally cancelled 109 years later. During the Cold War era, nearly 85 per cent of Swedish men were drafted into the army due to the nearby threat of the Soviet Union. The average term of service was about 11 months.

In 2015, Sweden’s military expenditur­e dropped to 1.1 per cent of its gross domestic product, down from 2.5 per cent in 1991 as the Cold War came to an end.

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