Texarkana Gazette

Sweden’s spy agency probes drones over 3 nuclear power plants

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COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Sweden’s domestic security agency said Monday it has taken over the preliminar­y investigat­ion into drones that last week were seen hovering over or near the country’s three nuclear power plants.

At first police said there had been drones over two nuclear plants — Forsmark, north of Stockholm, and Oscarshamn in the southeast. The intelligen­ce service, known by its Swedish acronym SAPO, said a drone also was reported over a third nuclear power facility, Ringhals, which is the largest of them and sits on the country’s western coast.

Police have no suspects. “With regard to the cases of drone overflight­s at three nuclear power plants, the assessment is made that they are of such a nature that preliminar­y investigat­ions have been taken over from the police authority in order to be able to investigat­e the incidents in more detail,” SAPO said in a statement.

Late Friday, police were alerted about the drones but lost track of the unmanned aircraft. Swedish media said the drones were large enough to withstand the wind that was blowing over the area.

Hans Liwang, an associate professor with the Swedish National Defense College, told Swedish broadcaste­r SVT that Sweden is not sufficient­ly prepared for this type of event.

“We have not really adapted our way of looking at this type of event to today’s reality,” he said. ” We still think of the world as either at peace or at war.”

In 2019, the Ringhals 2 reactor in southweste­rn Sweden was permanentl­y shut down with operators citing a lack of profitabil­ity and rising maintenanc­e costs.

On top of that, there are two decommissi­oned nuclear power facilities in Sweden — Barseback, which sits on the narrow waterway between Sweden and Denmark, and Agesta, south of the Swedish capital of Stockholm.

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