19.8 C
London
Friday, July 5, 2024
HomeRussiaswedenSweden's supreme commander says defence spending to reach 2% of GDP by...

Sweden’s supreme commander says defence spending to reach 2% of GDP by 2026

Date:

Related stories

Europa’s slide to the Right

After the 2024 shock and the French elites are...

Europe’s New “Iron Lady” Estonia’s Kaja Kallas

Europe’s new “Iron Lady”, Estonia’s Kaja Kallas, is one...

Putin’s Visit to Hanoi: Hardly a Challenge to Vietnam-US Strategic Partnership

Phan Xuan Dung and Benjamin HoRussian president Vladimir Putin’s...

Auditors warn of LNG dependency after Russian sources cut off

The successful phasing-out of gas imports from Russia risks...

We must win. Ukraine will win

Brussels/London (16/6 – 33.33) The defeat...
spot_imgspot_img

STOCKHOLM, Nov 1 (Reuters) – Rising prices and a weak currency mean Sweden will reach the NATO target for defence expenditure of 2% of GDP by 2026, two years earlier than previously planned, Sweden’s supreme commander said on Tuesday.

Sweden and Finland applied to join NATO in the summer as a direct consequence of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The two Nordic countries membership has been approved by 28 of NATO’s 30 members.

“We are in a very serious security situation,” Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces Micael Byden told a news conference after delivering spending recommendations to the government.

He said Sweden would increase it’s military capacity across land, sea and air, including more unmanned systems and increased presence on the strategic island of Gotland. Sweden will double its number of conscripts to 50,000 in 2035 from 24,000 in 2025.

Increased prices for military equipment, rising interest rates and a weak Swedish currency, making purchases from abroad even more costly, meant Sweden’s expenditure on defence was estimated to reach 2% of GDP sooner than previously estimated, the supreme commander said.

Byden also said he recommended the government to not set any red lines initially when joining NATO, such as not allowing NATO bases or nuclear weapons on Swedish territory.

“To set reservations at an early stage, before we have even joined, is to create friction and blockages and we want to avoid that,” he said. reuters.com

Latest stories

spot_img