logo
Nordic nations embrace total defense as the risk of sabotage and war rises

Nordic nations embrace total defense as the risk of sabotage and war rises

Time of India29-05-2025
In 1944,
Norwegian resistance fighters
in the town of Kongsberg blew up a factory making cannons for occupying
Nazi German forces
during World War II. More than 80 years later, the municipality could once again be a target for sabotage and is preparing for war.
The local authorities have dusted off Cold War-era bomb shelters, installed a new satellite communications system and are working with the military on plans to help a deployment of Western forces in case of conflict.
"The lesson we learned from Ukraine is that everybody pitched in," said Odd John Resser, Kongsberg's Emergency Planning Officer, noting breweries that pivoted to making Molotov cocktails, local authorities that built schools in shelters and weapons factories which ramped up production.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
모공각화증, 스크럽보다 '이것' 먼저 해보세요
현명한소비자
Undo
Across the
Nordic nations
, governments are boosting defense spending, reassessing security and pushing the concept of total defense. It's an approach which mobilizes the whole of society to defend against military and non-military threats.
As Moscow wages war in Ukraine, Western officials are accusing Russia of being behind a campaign of sabotage, arson and cyberattacks and there are jitters across the continent about whether Europe can rely on the U.S. as a partner.
Live Events
The Norwegian government published its first national security strategy in May, saying the country is facing its most serious security situation since World War Two.
"After decades of peace," it warned, "a new era has begun for Norway and for Europe."
"What is now happening in Ukraine has to be a wake-up call for all and we must strengthen our defense to prevent anything like that from happening to us," Norway's Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store told The Associated Press.
Total defense Norway announced in January that it plans to start building bomb shelters in new buildings after halting the practice in 1998.
The Swedish government appointed its first minister for civil defense in 2022, shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine. Residents aged 16 to 70 are required to serve in the event or threat of war, either in the military or helping to provide rescue, firefighting, healthcare or other services.
Finland's civil defense shelters are the envy of the Nordics and can fit around 86% of the Finnish population. One public shelter in Helsinki can fit 6,000 people, is designed to withstand the fallout from a nuclear attack and is in an almost constant state of readiness with beds and sinks tucked away behind blast doors and an underground hockey pitch.
Norway and some other Nordic nations also tell residents to have enough food and water stored for seven days.
"How would you and your nearest family manage if the electricity supply was cut off for a longer period? What would you do if the water supply failed?" the Norwegian handbook asks.
AP spoke to 11 people in Kongsberg and the majority said they had some form of supplies. While most didn't have a stockpile for seven days - and some had nothing at all - two people said they could probably survive for more than a week.
"Russia is very close to Norway and you don't know what's going to happen. I would rather be prepared than not prepared," said Katina Bakke, who works in a sports shop in Kongsberg.
Community support for troops Although Norwegian authorities are not expecting an imminent conflict, if war comes to Northern Europe, Kongsberg could be critical.
The municipality, 85 kilometers (52 miles) southwest of the Norwegian capital Oslo with a population of around 27,000 people, is the headquarters of the Kongsberg Group, which makes high-precision weapons currently used in Ukraine. The company opened a new factory in 2024, ramping up production of advanced missiles used by multiple European countries.
The town could also play host to troops if there is a conflict. In May, local authorities across the region met with the military to plan support for Western troops with logistics and healthcare in the event of a deployment.
"If the allies are coming to Norway, either staying, training, doing war work or in transit towards the east, we will have a big task for the whole community to support that," Resser said.
By readying for the worst, Resser said, the municipality also prepares for other - more likely - threats such as a pandemic, extreme weather or power outages such as the one that immobilized Spain and Portugal in April.
Power generation and print-outs Authorities in Kongsberg were not always so proactive but a flood in 2007 and an exercise simulating a four-day power disruption in 2016 made them realize they needed to step up.
They did a risk assessment, as obliged by law, identified more than 30 vulnerabilities and started spending money on contingency plans.
Back-up power generators were bought for the town hall, medical facilities and old people's homes as well as a satellite link to be able to call for help. In case of a cyberattack, the local health authorities print and file critical patient data once a week.
There were teething problems - the first satellite phones purchased in 2017 could only connect from the local graveyard which was "not practical" in -20 degrees Celsius (-4 Fahrenheit) in winter, said Resser.
The second system was discovered to be broken in November last year, shortly after Donald
Trump
was elected for a second term as U.S. president.
Unsure of what Trump's election would mean for Norway, the local authorities chose a Norwegian satellite communications provider over an American competitor, Resser said, because the municipality wanted to make sure it had "national control" in an emergency.
The "key difference" in the resilience model used across the Nordic nations is that it "empowers" local authorities to make decisions said Martha Turnbull, Director at the European Centre of Excellence for Countering Hybrid Threats in Helsinki, Finland.
In the Nordics it's not up to the army to bring in bottles of water in a crisis; rather, there is the "expectation" that local authorities will respond, along with civilians and businesses, Turnbull said.
Sabotage Europeans elsewhere need to realize the threat from Moscow can reach "much deeper" than nations bordering Russia, said Matthew Redhead, a national security expert at the
Royal United Services Institute
in London.
"The threat is rising," from Russia's campaign of vandalism, sabotage and arson across Europe and Moscow could target energy grids, internet cables and water supplies, Norway's Defense Minister Tore O. Sandvik told AP.
"Sabotage has become one of the threats that is now on the radar to an extent that we haven't seen probably since the Second World War" said Even Tvedt, Chief Security Officer at the Kongsberg Group.
Reeling off suspicious incidents at the company, he detailed how in 2024 an activist tried to destroy engines for fighter jets, drones were spotted over an area where it's illegal to fly and attempts were made to get through a factory perimeter.
It's not always possible to identify motivation or to say if the incidents are separate, linked or just "some kid" flying a drone, but the number of suspicious events indicates sabotage is highly possible, Tvedt said.
Moscow is ramping up its activities in Europe to a "pre-war" level, said Redhead, but away from Russia ordinary people and local authorities may be less ready for a crisis because "we don't think we will be on the front line."
"Freaking people out about this at some point is potentially quite necessary."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US, EU targeting us for importing oil from Russia: India on Trump tariff threat
US, EU targeting us for importing oil from Russia: India on Trump tariff threat

India Today

time21 minutes ago

  • India Today

US, EU targeting us for importing oil from Russia: India on Trump tariff threat

India has strongly pushed back against criticism from the United States and the European Union over its oil imports from Russia, calling such targeting "unjustified and unreasonable" in light of continued and substantial Western trade with Ministry of External Affairs, responding to US President Donald Trump's threat to substantially hike tariffs on the buying and selling of Russian oil, said that India's decision to purchase discounted Russian oil followed the outbreak of the Ukraine conflict, which led traditional energy suppliers to divert their exports towards Europe. At the time, the United States had even encouraged India's purchases as a way to stabilise global energy ministry emphasised that India's energy imports from Russia are essential to ensuring affordable and predictable fuel prices for Indian consumers. "India's imports are meant to ensure predictable and affordable energy costs to the Indian consumer. They are a necessity compelled by global market situation. However, it is revealing that the very nations criticising India are themselves indulging in trade with Russia. Unlike our case, such trade is not even a vital national compulsion," the ministry said in a statement.- Ends

Israel Working on New Gaza Strategy Following International Outcry
Israel Working on New Gaza Strategy Following International Outcry

Mint

time21 minutes ago

  • Mint

Israel Working on New Gaza Strategy Following International Outcry

Israel will this week make a fresh plan on how to achieve its goals in Gaza, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, urging national unity in the face of global outrage at the humanitarian toll in the Palestinian territory. Negotiations on a new truce with Iran-backed Hamas stalled last month, leaving the almost two-year-long conflict at another impasse as United Nations warnings of famine and malnutrition grow more dire. Israel has long stated its objectives are to free the roughly 50 hostages that remain in captivity — about 20 of whom are believed to be alive — while destroying Hamas as a governing and military force. Hamas, designated a terrorist organization by the US and many other countries, has said it wants an agreement to end the war but has rejected Israeli calls to disarm. Briefing his ministers on Monday, Netanyahu said he would convene the Security Cabinet this week to direct the Israel Defense Forces on 'how to achieve the three war goals that we set out,' according to an official statement, which didn't give further detail. 'We must continue to stand together and fight together in order to achieve them.' The hint of a new strategy comes as Israel faces the most international pressure regarding its conduct of the war since the October 2023 Hamas attacks that triggered the conflict. The United Nations and aid groups have warned of increasing starvation in Gaza due to Israeli restrictions on aid — something Israel denies — and a number of Western governments have pledged to move toward recognition of a Palestinian state. Within Israel, hundreds of artists have signed a petition against the war, while retired defense chiefs have taken to the airwaves to argue there's little left to be achieved through force. Local media including Channel 12 has reported on disagreements between the government and military leaders — and even among Security Cabinet ministers — about the Gaza strategy. Israeli Culture Minister Miki Zohar, a senior member of Netanyahu's Likud party, said the government 'does not have time to waste' given worries for the fate of the hostages — and issued a warning of intensified military pressure on Hamas. 'The only option for Hamas to save itself is to return the hostages and leave the Gaza Strip,' he told Galey Israel radio. 'If that doesn't happen - none of them will get out. We'll hunt them until the end.' Israel's campaign in Gaza has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run health ministry, which does not distinguish between combatants and civilians. It has devastated swaths of the territory, which is now about 75% controlled by the Israeli army. Overrunning the rest would expose troops and tanks to redoubled urban battles. About 1,200 people were killed in the Oct. 7 attacks, with 250 abducted. Hamas has signalled defiance. 'We, the sons of the Palestinian people, will not hand over our weapons,' senior official Ghazi Hamad told Al Jazeera. 'Not even a blank bullet.' This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

Cambodia, Thailand discuss ceasefire monitoring, POW issues in Malaysia meeting
Cambodia, Thailand discuss ceasefire monitoring, POW issues in Malaysia meeting

First Post

time21 minutes ago

  • First Post

Cambodia, Thailand discuss ceasefire monitoring, POW issues in Malaysia meeting

Thai and Cambodian officials kicked off high-stakes border talks in Malaysia on Monday, aiming to cement the fragile ceasefire that followed five days of deadly clashes. read more Military attaches from various countries visit a hospital that was damaged after Cambodia fired artillery shells in Sisaket province, Thailand. File image/ AP Thai and Cambodian officials gathered in Malaysia on Monday for the first round of cross-border committee negotiations since a tense truce was agreed upon last week following five days of deadly armed border battles that killed dozens and displaced over 260,000 people. The four-day General Border Committee meetings were originally scheduled to be held by Cambodia, but both parties eventually agreed on a neutral site in Malaysia, the annual chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, which negotiated the cease-fire last month. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The truce on July 28 came in response to economic pressure from US President Donald Trump, who had told the warring nations that if the conflict continued, the US would not sign trade deals with them. Following the ceasefire, Washington reduced duties on imports from both nations from 36% to 19% on August 1. Monday's discussions centred on smoothing out specifics to avoid more clashes. Discussions of the decades-long rival territorial claims over the patches of territory near the common boundary are not on the agenda. A history of hostility Thailand and Cambodia have been feuding neighbors for centuries, since both were mighty empires. In modern times, a 1962 ruling by the International Court of Justice awarding Cambodia the land on which the ancient Preah Vihear temple stands marked a new low point in relations, and other border territory remained claimed by both countries. Fighting erupted in 2011 at Preah Vihaer, after which the ICJ in 2013 reaffirmed its earlier ruling, rankling Thailand. Relations deteriorated again sharply in May this year, when a Cambodian soldier was shot dead in a brief fracas in one of the disputed border zones, setting off diplomatic and trade sanctions, one against the other. Soon after two incidents last month in which Thai soldiers were wounded by land mines in disputed territory — for which Thailand blamed Cambodia — the two sides downgraded diplomatic relations and fighting broke out, each side blaming the other for starting the armed clashes. The talks this week will include finalizing details and scope of reference for an ASEAN monitoring team, Malaysian Chief of Defense Forces Gen. Mohamad Nizam Jaffar said Monday. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Despite some reports of attacks after the ceasefire came into effect, Nizam said such incidents were typical spillover violence and both sides showed strong commitment during Monday's talks to uphold the ceasefire. The main session of the General Border Committee on Thursday will be led by Thai Deputy Defense Minister Gen. Natthaphon Nakpanit and Cambodian Defense Minister Tea Seih, who also serves as deputy prime minister, and include observers from Malaysia, the United States and China, officials said. Despite the truce, tensions have persisted as both countries organized tours of the former battle areas for foreign diplomats and other observers to highlight damage allegedly caused by the other side. The two countries also continue to accuse each other of having violated international humanitarian laws with attacks on civilians and the use of illegal weapons. The battles are now fought on the propaganda front The propaganda war continues with accusations, denials, and cries of 'fake news,' while supporters of each side also tangle on social media. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Each side has blamed the other for starting the fighting and for indiscriminately targeting civilian sites with long-range weapons such as artillery and rockets, and using prohibited weapons. The hottest issue is Cambodia's allegations that Thailand has mistreated and tortured a squad of captured Cambodian soldiers. Two wounded members of the 20-man Cambodian group were repatriated on Friday. However, Thai officials said Monday that the soldiers 'qualify as prisoners of war' and 'will be released and repatriated only when the armed conflict ends,' which it considers a separate matter from last week's ceasefire. Thai military spokesperson Rear Admiral Surasant Kongsiri said at a news briefing Monday that Thailand has invited representatives from the International Committee of the Red Cross, ICRC, and the U.N.'s Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights, OHCHR, 'to visit the detained Cambodian soldiers on site.' Cambodia had called for such access. Neither the ICRC nor the OHCHR responded to a query from The Associated Press asking about any communications with the two governments. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Cambodia's king formalizes former leader Hun Sen's military role A surprise statement on Monday night in the Cambodian capital Phnom Penh announced that Cambodian King Norodom Sihamoni issued a Royal Decree authorizing the country's influential former leader Hun Sen to work together with his son, Prime Minister Hun Manet, in guiding military and national defense affairs. The king's decree said he was acting because the nation 'is suffering from serious violations and threats to its territorial integrity by the Thai soldiers, and in accordance with the spirit of the Constitution of Cambodia.' King Sihamoni generally keeps a low profile and exercises no political power or influence, taking no initiative in any state or government work. The 72-year-old Hun Sen, who is very active on social media, maintained a high profile during the fighting, urging his country's soldiers and hurling invective at Thailand and its leaders. He was once a guerrilla fighter with the Communist Khmer Rouge. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD It was not clear why Hun Sen would need or want authorization from King Sihamoni, since there has been no open dissent inside the country criticizing his actions during the conflict. The decree appeared to be a response to foreign news stories suggesting Hun Sen was usurping his son's authority. Hun Sen seemed to confirm this, saying on Facebook that he was exercising his rights as a five-star general with experience 'to fight the thieves who invaded my country,' after noting criticism from Thai media.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store