Difference between revisions of "Swedish submarine incidents"

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{{Event
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#REDIRECT [[The secret war against Sweden]]
|wikipedia=https://www.wikipedia.com/en/Swedish_submarine_incidents
 
|cavdef=
 
|historycommons=
 
|description=The submarine hunts or submarine incidents were a series of several incidents involving foreign submarines that occurred in Swedish territorial waters during the Cold War, attributed in Swedish media to the Soviet Union, argued to be a part of [[The secret war on Sweden]].
 
|start=1962
 
|end=2014
 
|ON_perpetrators=Soviet Russia
 
|perpetrators=NATO
 
|title=
 
|image=
 
|constitutes=Cold War, Low-level deep event, Strategy of tension, Psychological operation
 
|ON_constitutes=incident
 
|effects=
 
|type=
 
|fatalities=
 
|injuries=
 
|weapons=Submarines
 
|locations=Sweden
 
}}
 
A sinister amount of foreign submarines from foreign navies have occurred in Swedish water from [[1962]] to [[2014]]. This is also known by [[Swedish]] investigation commission member [[Ola Tunander]] - suspiciously the third at the time already - as [[The secret war against Sweden]].
 
 
 
==Official narrative==
 
Estranged brother of Wikispooks, [[Wikipedia writes]]; "The submarine hunts or submarine incidents were a series of several incidents involving foreign submarines that occurred in Swedish territorial waters during the Cold War, attributed in Swedish media to the Soviet Union.
 
On October 27, [[1981]], the Soviet submarine U 137 became stranded deep inside Swedish waters. The Swedish Navy responded aggressively to these perceived threats, increasing patrols in Swedish waters, mining and electronically monitoring passages, and repeatedly chasing and attacking suspected submarines with depth charge [[bomb]]s, but no hits or casualties were ever recorded. This incident encouraged development of incident weapons to increase security of future submarine incidents.
 
 
 
Reports of new submarine sightings and [[television]] imagery of Swedish Navy helicopters firing depth charges into coastal waters against suspected intruders became commonplace in the mid-to-late [[1980s]]. They remain, for many Swedes, one of the iconic images of the Cold War and of the Swedish relation to the Soviet Union—for some underlining what was considered a major threat to Swedish sovereignty, while for others illustrating the tense atmosphere of the time. However, reports of these incidents are contested, and an intensive debate emerged early on. This debate unfolded somewhat, but far from exclusively, along leftwing/rightwing lines, and became tied up with the larger issues of relations to [[Moscow]] and Swedish armed neutrality. The Soviet Union consistently denied that it was responsible for violating Swedish waters, and claimed that the U 137 had only crossed the border because of navigational faults. Russia today maintains this stance. While the submarine sightings subsided with the fall of the Soviet Union, the debate about these events has reemerged sporadically. They have been the subject of a number of government investigations in Sweden, and continue to attract media attention."
 
 
 
==Concerns==
 
{{FA|The secret war against Sweden}}
 
Professor Ola Tunander, who has researched this in depth and sat on the [[third submarine commission]] in [[2001]], concludes that the majority of these incursions to be of [[NATO]] origin.
 
Later, former US Secretary of Navy John Lehman told Ola Tunander that the decision about the Swedish operations that Weinberger had spoken about had been taken by a Deception Committee chaired by Director of Central Intelligence William Casey. The US did not just try to increase the defensive capabilities and the awareness of the Swedes. The intrusions were also about deception and PSYOPs, to change the mindset of the Swedes, to make them adapt to U.S. interests.<ref>http://www.fredsakademiet.dk/library/tunander.pdf</ref><ref>https://books.google.com/books?id=cN-ETroO0zEC&pg=PR13</ref>
 
 
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
==References==
 
{{reflist}}
 

Latest revision as of 01:40, 7 November 2023