Sweden Opens Cold War Shelters Amid ‘Looming War’ With Russia

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Sweden reopen cold war shelters amid looming war with Russia

Sweden is reopening thousands of Cold War bunkers across the country in preparation for a military confrontation with Russia. 

Hundreds of shelters on the Baltic Island of Gotland will be the first to reopen after intelligence officials identified the area as a likely target for a Russian invasion.

The move follows the announcement earlier this month that Sweden were introducing mandatory military service from 2018 for both men and women, in anticipation of war.

Sputniknews.com reports:

In 2017, all of Gotland’s 350 shelters should be thoroughly checked, MSB head Mats Berglund told Swedish Radio. Since the moment they were built, the shelters have been only subjected to random spot-checks, but are slated for a comprehensive inspection of unmatched scope in the light of the “special situation” in the Baltic and the ongoing rearmament. Gotland’s shelters have room for 35,000 people, and most of them are situated in the capital city Visby, as well as Slite and Fårösund, while the island has a total population of roughly 60,000.

In total, there are over 65,000 shelters with room for about 7 million people in Sweden, a nation of 10 million. According to MSB, they are intended to provide protection against all weapons that might be used, such as shock waves, shrapnel, gas, biological weapons, fire and ionizing radiation.

In late 2016, the Swedish government voiced plans to reinstate a Cold War-era civil defense system. Subsequently, security chiefs in Swedish municipalities received a mailing from MSB urging to increase their ability to resist an armed attack against Sweden from a “qualified opponent,” for which read Russia.

During the Cold War, the Swedish government spent up to 80 billion SEK ($9bln) to build a comprehensive system of shelters throughout the country. When the Soviet Union broke up and the Warsaw Pact was ultimately dissolved in 1991, there was shelter space available for 80 percent of Sweden’s population of that time. Since then, however, few new shelters have been built, whereas many have fallen into disuse. Another factor worth considering is that Sweden’s population has risen by over a million during the past two decades.

MSB CIO Svante Werger suggested that civil defense installations that were in use until the early 90s be again made fully functional in the future due to updated defense guidelines.

Security officials in Swedish municipalities voiced their discontent with the impending changes and admitted being hopelessly behind in preparations for lack of funds. Additionally, there was admittedly no clear-cut plan for how municipalities should provide protective masks, vaccines or fuel in the event of a crisis.

5 Comments

  1. Welllest hope they are right….its along overdue war…… and it is very exciting to see it unfolding…FINALLY

  2. To solve Sweden’s migrant crime epidemic place all the migrants in these shelters for their own protection.

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