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Sweden's military is stepping up its preparedness in response to Russian activity that 'deviates' from normal

Soldiers from Sweden's Gotland Regiment patrol in Visby Harbor, January 13, 2022.
KARL MELANDER/TT News Agency/AFP via Getty Images
  • Sweden's military has raised its preparedness in response to Russian military activity that "deviates from the normal picture."
  • Swedish military officials said tensions were likely to last and that some of the measures they will take will be visible and others not.

STOCKHOLM (AP) — A top military chief in Sweden said Friday that there is increased Russian activity in the Baltic Sea which "deviates from the normal picture," leading the Scandinavian nation's military to raise its preparedness.

"We have decided to reposition our troops. It does not have to mean an increased threat, but we always want to adapt to the prevailing situation," Lt. Gen Leif Michael Claesson told The Associated Press.

Sweden, which is not part of NATO, has among other things noticed a number of landing craft from Russia's northern navy which have been entering the Baltic Sea.

Claesson who is the operations manger at the Swedish Armed Forces, said that some of the measures taken by the Swedish military will be visible and others will not be.

Sweden's Gotland Regiment patrols in northern Gotland, January 16, 2022.
KARL MELANDER/TT News Agency/AFP via Getty Images

"We will act in different locations in Sweden, in different manners," he said, adding they would be visible on the strategically important Baltic Sea island of Gotland that sits a little more than 186 miles from the Russian Baltic Sea exclave of Kaliningrad.

On Thursday, a guard platoon was seen walking in the harbor of the island's main town, Visby, as well as in other ports and in the airport.

"We will operate in the air, at sea, below the surface and on the ground in different ways and in different geographical locations," he said.

Earlier last week, Maj. Gen. Lena Hallin, head of Sweden's military intelligence agency MUST, said that "we are far from a normal situation for Swedish security today."

"For some time, developments have been moving in the direction of a serious security policy crisis in Europe, and it has accelerated in recent months," Hallin said. "It is an illusion that tensions in Europe would be temporary."

She said Russia's "main objectives are regime stability and strengthening its position as a major power. Preventing NATO enlargement in the vicinity of Russia is a top priority — and this is being looked at very long-term."