A 70-year-old army officer? Sweden mulls lifting age of conscription amid staff shortage

A Swedish government-appointed review suggests raising the upper conscription age limit of former officers from 47 to 70.

A soldier in green uniform and green beret loads bullets into a gun magazine from a turret on a boat. He has a small Swedish flag badge sown onto the left upper arm of his uniform

Sweden reintroduced partial conscription for men and women in 2017. Source: AP / Heiko Junge

Sweden is considering calling up former officers as old as 70 to active duty as it seeks to ensure its military is prepared in times of crisis, its defence minister said.

The proposal is among several options suggested by an inquiry that the government ordered in 2024, the year the country joined NATO, to look at how Sweden's expanding armed forces would be assured of personnel in a conflict.

Sweden broke two centuries of military non-alignment to join NATO in the aftermath of Russia's 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which sparked alarm in Stockholm and Finland that Moscow could eventually threaten them.

Presenting the results of the government probe, defence minister Pal Jonson told a press conference on Tuesday AEST that the Nordic country of 10.5 million people faced "serious times".

"This means that we are now making very significant investments in the military defence," Jonson told reporters.
Sweden also needed to make sure that enough military personnel would be available in a crisis.

The government inquiry suggested raising the age that former military officers could be recalled to active duty to 70, from the current 47.

It also proposed removing a limit on military deployment for former conscripts.

Currently, "deployment duty" remains for a maximum of 10 years after the most recent military service, but the inquiry suggested scrapping this limit and instead placing those who hadn't served for 10 years or more into the Swedish Armed Forces' reserve force.

Jonson said the proposals would be sent out for review, hoping to present a bill to parliament early next year.
After the Cold War ended in 1991, Sweden drastically slashed its defence spending as it focused its military efforts on international peacekeeping missions.

But it reversed course following Russia's 2014 annexation of Crimea, and started increasing military expenditure.

In 2017, the country reintroduced compulsory military service, seven years after abandoning it.

In March, the government announced it would increase defence spending by about 300 billion krona ($47 billion) over the next decade, aiming to increase spending to 3.5 per cent of GDP by 2030.


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Source: AFP


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