The Denver Post

“Adviser” on Fox News not familiar to Swedes

- By Jennifer Peltz

A trans-Atlantic wave of puzzlement is rippling across Sweden for the second time in a week, after a prominent Fox News program featured a “Swedish defense and national security adviser” who’s unknown to the country’s military and foreign-affairs officials.

Swedes, and some Americans, have been wondering about representa­tions of the Nordic nation in the U.S. since President Donald Trump invoked “what’s happening last night in Sweden” while alluding to past terror attacks in Europe during a rally Feb. 18. There hadn’t been any major incident in Sweden the previous night.

Then, Fox News commentato­r Bill O’Reilly convened an on-air faceoff Thursday over Swedish immigratio­n and crime between a Swedish newspaper reporter and a man identified on screen and verbally as a “Swedish defense and national security adviser,” Nils Bildt.

Bildt linked immigratio­n to crime and social problems in Sweden, lamented what he described as Swedish liberal close-mindedness about the downsides of welcoming newcomers and said: “We are unable in Sweden to socially integrate these people.”

But if viewers might have taken the “adviser” for a government insider, the Swedish Defense Ministry and Foreign Office told the newspaper Dagens Nyheter they knew nothing of him. Calls to Swedish officials Saturday weren’t immediatel­y returned.

Bildt is a founding member of a corporate geopolitic­al strategy and security consulting business with offices in Washington, D.C., Brussels and Tokyo, according its website. His bio speaks to expertise on defense and national security issues, saying his experience includes serving as a naval officer, working for a Japanese official and writing books on issues ranging from investment and political climates to security issues in working in hostile environmen­ts.

But security experts in Sweden said he wasn’t a familiar figure in their ranks in that country.

“He is in not in any way a known quantity in Sweden and has never been part of the Swedish debate,” Swedish Defence University leadership professor Robert Egnell said by e-mail to The Associated Press on Saturday. He and Bildt — also known then as Nils Tolling — were in a master’s degree program in war studies together at King’s College London in 2002-03, and Bildt moved to Japan soon after, he said.

The executive producer of “The O’Reilly Factor” said Bildt was recommende­d by people the show’s booker consulted.

“After pre-interviewi­ng him and reviewing his bio, we agreed that he would make a good guest for the topic that evening,” executive producer David Tabacoff said in a statement.

The network said O’Reilly was expected to address the subject further on Monday’s show.

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