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Politics

Sweden open to leading UN mission in Ukraine

February 17, 2018

Swedish Defense Minister Peter Hultqvist said Sweden will provide troops only if both Russia and the West agree. Western officials are considering deploying a force led by non-NATO nations in eastern Ukraine.

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Soldier of the Ukrainian army during shooting training near Troitske
Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/C. Arce

Non-NATO member Sweden would be open to providing troops to a UN peacekeeping mission in trouble-torn eastern Ukraine if both Russia and the West agreed, Swedish Defense Minister Peter Hultqvist told Ukrainian and US officials at the Munich Security Conference on Saturday.

Hultqvist was responding to a report commissioned by former NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen — now an adviser to Ukraine's President Petro Poroshenko — which proposed that Sweden lead a UN peacekeeping mission in Ukraine.

"If we see the right conditions and if we see that this mission can help ... then we are open to that," Hultqvist said. "We are not there yet, but it is something positive."

Read more: The forgotten victims of Donbass

The report proposed a UN force of some 20,000 soldiers from non-NATO countries and 4,000 police to help end the conflict in eastern Ukraine that has claimed more than 10,000 lives since 2014.

Ukrainian forces ranged against Russian-backed separatists continue to periodically clash despite a notional ceasefire and diplomatic peace efforts.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has suggested a limited UN peacekeeping mission to resolve the conflict. Germany has called for a UN peacekeeping mandate before Russia's election in March.

Over 700 unarmed civilian observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) currently operate monitoring missions in the region.

Ukraine – Living on the front line

Sweden-Russia tensions

Sweden's offer to lead the UN mission in Ukraine comes amid strained relations with Russia, which has increased military operations in the Baltic Sea off the coast of Sweden since its annexation of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula in 2014.

Russia's maneuvers prompted Sweden to deploy a permanent unit of 350 soldiers on the strategically important Baltic Sea island of Gotland. Hultqvist said in December that a "worsened security situation" in the Baltic region was behind the decision.

The perceived threat from Russia has also revived the decades-old debate whether Sweden should join NATO.

Russia has repeatedly warned Sweden against joining the Western military alliance, describing such a move as a provocation.

Russians cause anxiety on Gotland

ap/jm (Reuters, AP)

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