Sweden will increase defense spending by about 300 billion kronor ($30 billion) over the next decade, the prime minister said Wednesday, calling it the nation’s biggest rearmament push since the Cold War.
The Nordic country drastically slashed defense spending after the Cold War ended and in the early 2000s, but reversed course following Moscow’s 2014 annexation of Crimea.
The aim was to increase defense spending to 3.5 percent of GDP by 2030, up from the current 2.4 percent.
“We have a completely new security situation… and uncertainties will remain for a long time,” Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson told reporters, adding that it marks Sweden’s “biggest rearmament since the Cold War.”
The Nordic country dropped two centuries of military non-alignment and applied for membership in NATO in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, becoming its 32nd member in March 2024.
Sweden has already decided on investments that are expected to put defense spending at 2.6 percent of GDP in a few years, Kristersson said, noting this already put it above NATO’s two-percent spending target.
“That is not enough,” Kristersson said. “Our assessment is that NATO and especially European NATO countries need to take major steps in the coming years.”
Kristersson said that his country expected that NATO would decide to increase the spending target at an upcoming summit of the alliance in June and was aiming at what it was believed that new target would be.
In March 2022, after Russia’s full-fledged invasion of Ukraine, Stockholm announced it would increase spending, aiming to dedicate two percent of GDP to defense “as soon as possible.”
While previous defense spending increases have been financed through the country’s regular budget, Kristersson said that in order to rearm in such short time it was necessary to borrow funds for defense during a “transitional period.”
“Today’s announcement can really be summed up as a larger, faster and stronger total defense, both civilian and military,” Deputy Prime Minister and Energy Minister Ebba Busch said, speaking alongside Kristersson.
Long Process
US President Donald Trump has turbocharged a drive for Europe to rearm by casting doubt on Washington’s central role in NATO and his overtures towards Russia on Ukraine.
Earlier this month, European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen unveiled an initiative to help ramp up military budgets that she says could mobilize up to 800 billion euros.
Jacob Westberg, an associate professor at the Swedish Defence University, told AFP that, while 3.5-percent-of-GDP target was a sharp increase compared to the low spending levels seen in the early 2000s, it was still comparable to what was spent in the 1970s.
Westberg noted that Sweden spent over four percent of GDP in the 1950s and in fact at the time had the world’s fourth largest air force and eighth largest navy.
“We could mobilize between 600,000 and 800,000 men during the Cold War,” Westberg said.
He also added that while 300 billion kroner over a decade was a considerable addition, Sweden’s defense budget had already been tripled, to 120 billion a year, in 2024, compared to a decade earlier.
In addition, while funding was returning to previous levels, rebuilding a country’s military takes time, Westberg said.
“In some areas, such as buying ammunition or equipment… you can relatively easily convert funds into military capacity,” the associate professor said.
But when it comes to the issue of expanding the size of the military, which has been Sweden’s ambition since it reintroduced conscription in 2017 after a seven year pause, that is more time-consuming.
“As such, you can’t expect these funds to have an immediate effect comparable to the amount of additional funds,” Westberg said.