Logo
Contact Newsagent Login
Scoop Search
Articles & Opinions Cook Is Fiji FSM Hawaii Kiribati Marshall Is Nauru New Caledonia Niue NZ
Papua New Guinea Samoa Solomon Is Tahiti Timor Leste Tokelau Tonga Tuvalu Vanuatu West Papua

Pentagon’s New Global Military Partner: Sweden

17:40 August 27, 2010Pacific Press Releases 0 comments

Article – Rick Rozoff

The longest war in U.S. history and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s first armed conflict outside Europe, as well as its first ground war, is nearing the beginning of its tenth year.

Pentagon’s New Global Military Partner: Sweden

Rick Rozoff

The longest war in U.S. history and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s first armed conflict outside Europe, as well as its first ground war, is nearing the beginning of its tenth year.

Over 120,000 troops are serving under NATO’s International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan in addition to 30,000 under American command, and the Western military bloc recently confirmed that Malaysia has become the 47th official Troop Contributing Nation (TCN) for the war effort.

Never before have forces from so many nations served under a common command in one country, one war theatre or one war.

All 28 full NATO member states have supplied soldiers for the campaign, as have over 20 Alliance partners in Europe, the South Caucasus, the South Pacific, Asia, Africa and South America. With the inclusion of contingents deployed and pledged by nations such as Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Colombia and Tonga as well as the 47 official troop contributors, there are military personnel from every populated continent assigned to the West’s war in Afghanistan.

European nations that have maintained neutrality since the end of World War Two and in some cases decades and centuries longer have provided NATO with troops for its International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). Austria, Ireland and Switzerland have sent nominal contingents under Partnership for Peace (PfP) obligations. PfP member Finland has approximately 150 troops attached to NATO’s Afghan command and Sweden has 500. The Swedish consignment was until lately the second-largest of all non-NATO member states, only surpassed by Australia until over 750 more U.S. Marine Corps-trained Georgian troops arrived in the South Asian nation in April. (Last month Georgian leader Mikheil Saakashvili said that the 1,000 total troops he deployed were matriculated in the “school of Afghan warfare” for use in future conflicts like those of the five-day Georgian-Russian war of two years ago.)

The main function of the Partnership for Peace program – whose name is counterintuitive, Orwellian and blasphemous given the fact it has graduated 12 Eastern European nations into full membership in the world’s only military bloc and prepared them for deployments to Afghanistan and Iraq – is to integrate nations in Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia for NATO operations abroad. The major beneficiary of that process is the Pentagon.

Over twenty nations currently in that category are having their armed forces, military doctrines, weapons arsenals and foreign policy orientation transformed for interoperability with the Western alliance and in particular its leading member, the United States.

The PfP is training the armies of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Austria, Bosnia, Finland, Georgia, Ireland, Macedonia, Montenegro and Sweden for the war in Afghanistan and, complementarily, is employing the war there to provide the militaries of those states combat experience and to build a globally deployable force for future NATO operations, including ones nearer the respective nations’ borders. Other components of the strategy include conducting ever more frequent and large-scale war games and other combat training in partnership nations with Afghanistan the immediate battlefield destination but with general applicability for other locations, and expanding the arsenals of PfP states with – NATO interoperable – unmanned aerial vehicles (drones), armored combat vehicles, artillery, attack helicopters, advanced warplanes and other engines of war.

Al Burke and his dedicated colleagues with the Stop the Furtive Accession to NATO initiative in Sweden are conducting a tireless campaign to sound the alarm over the surreptitious and accelerating drive to integrate the nation into NATO’s – and the Pentagon’s – global military sphere. For over a year Swedish troops in charge of ISAF operations in four northern Afghan provinces have been engaged in regular firefights, the first combat operations the nation has conducted in almost two hundred years. Two Swedish officers were killed in February, the first troops killed in an exchange of fire with Afghan rebels.

On July 1 the Swedish government ended 109 years of conscription and made the country’s armed force entirely voluntary; that is, Stockholm – to use the approved term – professionalized the military according to NATO standards and demands.

As a result, “All Swedish soldiers will in future be liable to be sent abroad on missions against their will. Any soldiers who refuse could lose their jobs….”

The four unions representing the nation’s military personnel are all opposed to the compulsory overseas deployment provision.

As a press agency reported on the day of the announcement, “At the same time, it was decided to loosen the country’s traditionally strict neutrality to allow participation in more international military operations, like the NATO-led mission in Afghanistan.”

Last year Sweden hosted the ten-day Loyal Arrow 2009 NATO military exercise in its north. The war games consisted in part of “the biggest air force drill ever in the Finnish-Swedish Bothnia Bay” and included the participation of 2,000 troops from ten nations, 50 warplanes and a British aircraft carrier. An account of it stated, “The exercise is based upon a fictitious scenario. Within this scenario, elements of the NATO Response Force (NRF)…will be deployed to a theatre of operations.” The allegedly fictitious situation in question was one which could well be applied in the Baltic nations of Estonia and Latvia, the South Caucasus, Transdniester and other locations where NATO forces and war machinery could come into direct contact with their Russian opposite numbers.

Late this May NATO’s top military commander made a tour of inspection to Sweden, commending its government for deploying and maintaining 500 troops in Afghanistan. American Admiral James Stavridis, Supreme Allied Commander Europe, visited the country on the invitation of the Supreme Commander of the Swedish Armed Forces, Sverker Goranson. He also consulted with the State Secretary to the Prime Minister, Gustav Lind, and the State Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Frank Belfrage.

A few days later several special representatives from “NATO Partner Nations Austria, Finland, Sweden and Switzerland,” among them Veronika Wand-Danielsson, ambassador of Sweden to NATO, met with French Air Force General Stephane Abrial, commander of Allied Command Transformation (ACT) at the latter’s headquarters in Norfolk, Virginia.

The European envoys “were also briefed by U.S. Navy Rear Admiral Lawrence Rice of U.S. Joint Forces Command (USJFCOM) on that command’s mission and on the achievements and future of the ACT-USJFCOM cooperation.”

NATO is and has always been designed to recruit nations into a military bloc so the Pentagon can integrate them into its own network as well. Where NATO advances, U.S. troops and bases follow, as with Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary and Poland where Washington has acquired air, training, interceptor missile and strategic airlift bases over the past five years.

In June Swedish troops were among 3,000 from 12 countries participating in the annual U.S.-led Baltic Operations (BALTOPS) NATO Partnership for Peace maneuvers, “the largest multinational naval exercise in the Baltic Sea,” which included 500 U.S. Marines, 130 of whom stormed a beach in Estonia, the U.S. Marine Corps’ “first amphibious landing exercise in a territory that was once part of the Soviet Union,” 90 miles from the Russian border.

At the same time United States Air Forces in Europe launched this year’s Unified Engagement “wargame designed to explore future joint warfare concepts and capabilities” in Estonia. Last year’s version was conducted in Sweden.

The American delegation was led by the commander of United States Air Forces in Europe, General Roger Brady, and worked with “counterparts from Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Sweden to strengthen relationships, and improve interoperability and future cooperation.”

The United States Air Forces in Europe website described the event as a “transformation war game to explore future combined warfighting concepts and capabilities.”

According to Brady, “Because of training seminars like Unified Engagement, the U.S. Air Force and our partners worldwide are better prepared for future operational challenges.”

In mid-June it was announced that “Swedish armed forces operating in Afghanistan as part of NATO’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) will be equipped with their first tactical UAV capability since deploying into theatre….”

Shadow 200 unmanned aerial vehicle (drone) systems, “Already operated by the US Army and Marine Corps in Afghanistan and Iraq,” will be deployed by the Swedish air force within months.

During the same week the Finnish government announced it was presenting a proposal to the nation’s parliament to join the NATO Response Force, following up on a decision of three years ago to do so “as part of a joint decision and simultaneous membership with Sweden.”

The U.S. led the annual NATO Partnership for Peace Sea Breeze multinational military exercises in Ukraine in the first half of July – in the Crimea, near the headquarters of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet at Sevastopol – with Alliance members and partners Sweden, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Moldova, Poland and Ukraine.

In late July and early August the U.S. 555th Fighter Squadron with 250 airmen spent two weeks in Sweden conducting air-to-air and air-to-ground exercises with the host country’s air force during which “the U.S. Air Force worked side-by-side with their Swedish allies both in the skies and on the ground conducting more than 180 flying missions that tested their air combat capabilities as well as their precision weapons scoring….”

The deputy commander of the participating Swedish unit, Övlt (Lieutenant Colonel) Harri Larsson, stated on the occasion: “We really appreciate working with the U.S. Air Force because it gives us dimension…training with someone else, other equipment, other tactics, working in the English language, which is not our native language….I believe it gives us a lot of good experience which we can use in the future.”

He added that the air combat exercises were important for integrating the warfighting capabilities of his nation’s Gripen pilots with U.S. F-16 Fighting Falcon counterparts. “They can improve their training and we become more interoperable.”

Larsson also revealed the purpose behind the joint maneuvers: “Our government wants us to become more flexible and be able to, on a short notice, go abroad. (Therefore), we need to work with other countries, especially the U.S. (as) the U.S. is the biggest contributor to NATO and the UN. [F]rom our point of view it’s necessary to work with the U.S.”

As the American squadron returned to the Aviano Air Base in Italy, Övlt Larsson said “the F 21 Wing hopes to host its American allies again in the near future.” The F 21 Wing, also known as the Norrbotten Air Force Wing, hosted the fifty NATO warplanes used in last year’s Loyal Arrow war games.

Last week the U.S. Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Gary Roughead arrived in Sweden to inspect some of the country’s warships and a submarine and meet with his counterpart Rear Admiral Anders Grenstad to “discuss present and future operations between the two navies in the region and around the globe.”

Sweden’s top military commander, General Sverker Goranson, was at the Pentagon on August 5 to meet with Admiral Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Goranson had earlier studied at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas and served as military attache in the United States.

With eleven years of NATO expansion and the Alliance’s transformation into the world’s first internationally-oriented military bloc, no nation in Europe is permitted to be neutral and none can avoid involvement in military missions, including wars, abroad. Sweden is no exception, having joined scores of other previously non-aligned nations around the world in being pulled into the Pentagon’s orbit in the post-Cold War period.

To illustrate how widely the network has expanded, on July 16 military officers from 63 nations enrolled at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College – Swedish military chief Goranson’s alma mater – visited state officials in Topeka, Kansas.

The officers were from Afghanistan, Albania, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Bangladesh, Belgium, Bosnia, Botswana, Britain, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Canada, Colombia, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, El Salvador, Estonia, Ethiopia, France, Georgia, Germany, Hungary, Indonesia, Iraq, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kosovo, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Malaysia, Mexico, Moldova, Morocco, the Netherlands, Nigeria, Norway, Pakistan, the Philippines, Poland, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Serbia, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Suriname, Sweden, Taiwan, Tanzania, Thailand, Turkey, Uganda and Ukraine.

ENDS

Content Sourced from scoop.co.nz
Original url

  • Trackback-URL
  • Print This Post Print This Post
  • comments feed for this post

No comments yet.

Write a comment:

 

Search Pacific.scoop.co.nz
Pacifc Islands Forum
Our Facebook page

Pacific Media Centre newsfeed

  • Dreadlocks - Creativity and climate change in the Pacific
  • Communication, Culture and Society in Papua New Guinea: Yu tok wanem?
  • PNG: IFJ concerned by threats to free speech in PNG
  • REGION: Opinion: Not all tuna are created equal
  • REGION: Two new Pacific media and culture books out soon



TWN newsfeed

  • Auckland – we just get used to it
  • Traditional practices add integrity to organic produce
  • NZ farmers have overtreated for worms for decades, says US expert
  • Council wants them out but will Occupy protestors leave?
  • New precinct will be world class, says dean


  • Pacific Links

    • About Pacific.Scoop
    • AUT's new Pacific journalism course
    • Brown Pages
    • Knowledge Basket Pacific
    • Pacific Cooperation Foundation
    • Pacific Journalism Review
    • Pacific Media Centre – AUT University
    • Pacific Media Watch
    • Pasifika Foundation
    • University of the South Pacific
  • Pacific Media

    • Asia-Pacific (Al-Jazeera)
    • BBC’s Asia-Pacific
    • Cook Islands News
    • Fiji Daily Post
    • Fiji Sun
    • Fiji Times
    • Fijilive
    • Hawaiian Independent
    • Islands Business
    • Kiribati Independent
    • La Dépêche de Tahiti
    • Les Nouvelles Calédoniennes
    • Matangi Tonga
    • Māori Television
    • New Dawn FM 95.3
    • NewsWire (Whitireia)
    • Niu FM
    • Oceania Flash
    • Pacific Islands Report
    • Pacific Mini Games newspaper
    • Pacnews
    • PasiMA
    • PIMA
    • PINA
    • PMC on YouTube
    • PNG Post-Courier
    • Radio Australia’s Pacific Beat
    • Radio Fiji
    • Radio NZ International
    • Radio Tarana
    • Radio Waatea
    • Reportage (UTS)
    • Reportage-Enviro
    • Samoa News
    • Samoa Observer
    • Samoalive Newsline
    • Solomon Star
    • Solomon Times
    • Spasifik magazine
    • Sunday Chronicle (PNG)
    • Tagata Pasifika
    • Tahiti Presse
    • Tahiti-Pacifique
    • Te Waha Nui (AUT)
    • The National (PNG)
    • TNews (NZ)
    • Vanuatu Daily Post
    • Xtra media
  • Pasifika Blogs

    • Avaiki Nius
    • Coup Four And A Half
    • Croz Walsh’s Fiji
    • David Robie’s Cafe Pacific
    • Global Voices Online
    • Malum Nalu’s PNG
    • Nga Reo Tangata
    • Pacific Eyewitness
    • Pacific Freedom Forum
    • Pacific Media Centre Niusblog
    • Tempo Semanal
    • Whenua Fenua Enua Vanua

  • REGION-WIDE NEWS:

    Pac Scoop VideoPacific Media Centre: YouTube channel's latest videos

    Pacific water crisis

    Dirty water will kill 368 people in the next six weeks in Papua New Guinea. It's a dilemma no mother should have to face. Oxfam video and story.


    Pacific Forum meets rugby

    Pacific Media Centre’s Christopher Chang and Alexander Winkler check out the 42nd Pacific Islands Forum traps in Auckland and their team filed a comprehensive report on Pacific issues.

    • Pacific Headlines

      • Opposition grows over plan to scrap Race Relations office
      • Bringing out the best
      • US-China’s Dangerous Contest for Asia-Pacific
      • West Papua police name 6 suspects in Bima protest ‘war’ but no arrests yet
      • Papua Students Reject UP4B
      • Open Letter: Fear For The Safety Of WP Political Prisoners
      • Neighbourhood team serious about safe fun
      • Papua Councilors Recommend Revision In Local Election System
      • Amnesty International, Accountability, Action and W. Papua
      • Latest Post Under Working With Us
      • ASCC Student Support Services Participates in TRIO Week
      • Words in Motion – Sunday, 4 March
      • Project to rejuvenate Abel Tasman National Park ecology
      • Bainimarama and the Fiji coups saga – behind the scenes
      • Major project to rejuvenate Abel Tasman National Park
    • Twitter: pacmedcentre

      • Opposition grows over plan to scrap Race Relations office http://Pacific./2012/02/opposition-grows-over-plan-to-scrap-race-relations-office/ about 8 hours ago from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • West Papua police name 6 suspects in Bim http:///2012/02/west-papua-police-name-6-suspects-in-bima-protest-war-but-no-arrests-yet/ about 17 hours ago from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Bainimarama and the Fiji coups saga - behind the scenes http://Pacific.scoop./2012/02/bainimarama-and-the-fiji-coups-saga-behind-the-scenes/ 02:24:38 AM February 21, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Indonesian police conduct armed sweep of http:///2012/02/indonesian-police-conduct-armed-sweep-of-papuan-treason-defendants-in-their-cells/ 07:23:40 AM February 20, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Television NZ 'blocking' Pacific servi http:///2012/02/television-nz-blocking-pacific-service-from-new-state-run-channel-says-fbc/ 09:46:55 PM February 19, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Allegations surface over Indian deal on Afghan mining http://t.co/IjMqQJmJ 09:26:46 PM February 19, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Victorian England parallels corrupt legal injustice http:///2012/02/victorian-england-parallels-corrupt-legal-injustices-of-indonesia-today/ 09:35:20 PM February 17, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Indonesia buys nine Airbus military transport jets http://t.co/6aq7OrAF 12:23:12 AM February 17, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • Unsolved West Papua killings holds up development, says l http:///2012/02/unsolved-west-papua-killings-holds-up-development-says-legislator/ 09:22:05 PM February 14, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      • French aid in Fiji flooding shows way to Pacific neighbours http://Paci/2012/02/french-aid-in-fiji-flooding-shows-way-to-pacific-neighbours/ 03:41:30 AM February 12, 2012 from Pacific Scoop ReplyRetweetFavorite
      @pacmedcentre


    MEET THE PMC TEAM

    Introducing some of the faces and projects involved in AUT's Pacific Media Centre. Meet Josephine Latu from Pacific Media Watch, Violet Cho from Irrawaddy magazine, filmmaker Jim Marbrook and TVNZ Tagata Pasifika's John Utanga, director David Robie and others. About Pacific Scoop. – PMC

    Text Links

    Toktok - Feedback

    • CheGuevara: Tapol is making money by explo...
    • Coralia: Yes the French might be trying...
    • Richard: hey please thinking realistic ...
    • Fanny Quinea: Indonesia Goverment have take...
    • Ian: $6.39 BILLION ! on the militar...
    • King Binoka: Graham - Lei moce ganei ! Sa r...
    • Jack Wells: OMG! They're chugging the cir...
    • Paul Field: He's my senior brother and use...
    • MISSY: that is really rude to kill a ...
    • Paulino Ribeiro: This is a nice step doing by T...

    Categories

    • American Samoa
    • Articles
    • Asia-Pacific Journalism
    • Columns
    • Cook Is
    • Fiji
    • FSM
    • Guam
    • Hawaii
    • Insert Block
    • Kiribati
    • Marshall Is
    • Nauru
    • New Caledonia
    • Niue
    • NZ
    • Opinions
    • Pacific Headlines
    • Pacific Islands Forum
    • Pacific Press Releases
    • Palau
    • Papua New Guinea
    • RMI
    • Samoa
    • Solomon Is
    • Tahiti
    • Timor-Leste
    • Tokelau
    • Tonga
    • Tuvalu
    • Uncategorized
    • Vanuatu
    • West Papua

    Monthly Archives

    • February 2012
    • January 2012
    • December 2011
    • November 2011
    • October 2011
    • September 2011
    • August 2011
    • July 2011
    • June 2011
    • May 2011
    • April 2011
    • March 2011
    • February 2011
    • January 2011
    • December 2010
    • November 2010
    • October 2010
    • September 2010
    • August 2010
    • July 2010
    • June 2010
    • May 2010
    • April 2010
    • March 2010
    • February 2010
    • January 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
    • July 2009
    • June 2009

    Recently on Scoop

    • Proposed Changes to MFAT:
    • Public Address 22 February 2012 - Chch: Nothing is yet-to-be
    • Stateside with Rosalea Barker: 3000 pennies
    • Bringing out the best
    • The Rudd Challenge: Where to Now?
    • US-China’s Dangerous Contest for Asia-Pacific
    • Truthout: 22 February 2012
    • Scoop Coverage: Canterbury Earthquake Memorial 22/2/12
    • How a quake victim’s father has coped in 12 months
    • Signs Allegedly Posted by Iranian Bombers Baffle Bangkok

    Feeds

    • RSS Posts
    • RSS Comments
    Disclaimer
    All content is the work of the specific authors, journalists and researchers and not statements of opinion from AUT University.


    All editorial and news content is produced under the principles of Creative Commons. Permission to republish with attribution may be obtained from the Pacific Media Centre - pmc@aut.ac.nz

    Pacific.scoop.co.nz © 2012 | Powered by Scoop Media