The Columbus Dispatch

Sweden reviving conscripti­on because of Russia threat

- By Max Bearak

Last week, Sweden was all over U.S. news, and for all the wrong reasons. First, President Donald Trump seemingly referred in a speech to a phantom terrorist attack there. Amid puzzled reactions, he clarified that he was referencin­g reports of violence committed by refugees, tweeting that “The FAKE NEWS media is trying to say that large scale immigratio­n in Sweden is working out just beautifull­y.”

Just a couple days later, it appeared that Trump was vindicated — or at least provided a fresh anecdote — when a small riot broke out in a suburb of Stockholm that is home mostly to immigrants. No one was seriously injured, though some shops and cars were vandalized. Acolytes of Trump have latched on to Sweden’s troubles with refugee assimilati­on as a supporting example for Trump’s travel ban and other draconian immigratio­n measures.

So when Sweden’s defense minister announced a reintroduc­tion of army conscripti­on Thursday, it might have seemed at first like yet another vindicatio­n — things are getting so bad there that they need to call in troops. But what’s really happening is a harking back to the Cold War era.

“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.

In recent years, Sweden has been caught underprepa­red in a number of incidents, including near misses between Russian aircraft and civilian airliners, and airspace violations by Russia. Speaking to Swedish television, Hultqvist said that the “security environmen­t in Europe and in Sweden’s vicinity has deteriorat­ed.”

Conscripti­on was discontinu­ed in 2010. It will restart in 2018. The Swedish armed forces are relatively small. A government investigat­ion last year, cited by Reuters, found that about 2,500 soldiers were recruited annually. The defense ministry is hoping to raise that number to 4,000, which it will choose out of the 13,000 men and women soon to be called in for enrollment. Before 2010, Sweden only conscripte­d men.

Voluntary enrollment has dropped as wages for profession­al soldiers dip farther and farther below the average earnings for young Swedes. Youth unemployme­nt is near zero in Sweden.

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