Swedish Navy
The Swedish Royal Navy is the naval branch of the Swedish Armed Forces. It is composed of surface and submarine naval units - the Royal Fleet - as well as marine units, the Amphibious Corps.
In Swedish, vessels of the Swedish Royal Navy are given the prefix "HMS", short for Hans/Hennes majestäts skepp. In English, this is sometimes changed to "HSwMS" to differentiate Swedish vessels from those of the British Royal Navy.
History
Early Swedish kings organised a Swedish Royal Navy along the coastline through ledungen. This involved combined rowing and sailing ships. This system became obsolete with the development of society and changes in military technology. No later than in the 14th century, the duty to serve in ledungen was replaced by a tax. In 1427, when Sweden was still part of the Kalmar Union, Swedish warships did however participate in the naval battle of Öresund against the Hanseatic League. It is unclear how this force was organised and exactly on what basis.On 7 June 1522, one year after the separation of Sweden from the Kalmar Union, Gustav Vasa purchased a number of ships from the Hanseatic town of Lübeck. Official Swedish histories since the 19th century have often recorded this day as the birth of the current Swedish Royal Navy. The museum ship in Stockholm was a 17th-century ship of the Royal Swedish Navy.
The Amphibious Corps dates back to 1 January 1902, when a separate "Coastal Artillery" was established, and Marinen came into use as the name of the service as a whole. The last decade of the 20th century saw the abandonment of the coastal fortifications and the force became a more regular marine corps, renamed Amphibious Corps in 2000.
For most of the twentieth century the Swedish Royal Navy focused on the threat of a full-scale invasion of Sweden via the Baltic and on protecting commercial shipping. Sweden's location on the Scandinavian peninsula makes it highly dependent of maritime trade: 90% imports and exports enter or leave Sweden through the Baltic. In 1972 the government decreed that non-military measures should be used to protect merchant shipping. The resolution led to the de-commissioning of all the navy's destroyers and frigates, though the non-military measures the government intended to use to protect shipping have never been specified.
The navy first participated in a UN-led peacekeeping mission in October 2006 when the corvette began performing coastal surveillance duties for the United Nations Mission in Lebanon. HSwMS Gävle was relieved by, which returned to Sweden in September 2007.
,, and took part in the EU-led EUNAVFOR operation off the coast of the Horn of Africa. In 2010, was the EUNAVFOR flagship, housing the fleet headquarters led by RADM Jan Thörnqvist.
Organization
Until recently, the Navy was led by the Chief of the Navy, who was typically a Vice Admiral. This office has been eliminated, and the highest officer of the Navy is now the Chief of Navy, Rear Admiral Ewa Skoog Haslum, who is the senior representative of the Swedish Royal Navy's combat forces.The Marine units use the same system of rank as the Army.
Naval units
- 1st Submarine Flotilla located at Karlskrona
- 3rd Naval Warfare Flotilla located at Karlskrona
- 4th Naval Warfare Flotilla located at Berga at the Muskö naval base.
Amphibious units
- 1st Marine Regiment located in Berga
Bases
- Muskö naval base, located at Muskö island in the Stockholm archipelago. The base serves as the headquarters of the Swedish Royal Navy since September 2019.
- Karlskrona naval base, located at Karlskrona with detachments at Berga, Gothenburg and Skredsvik.
Training units
- Swedish Naval Warfare Centre located in Karlskrona
Equipment
The Swedish Royal Navy started to experiment with missiles, based on a recovered German V-2 rocket, as early as 1944. The main armament of the fleet was artillery and torpedoes for surface warfare and anti-submarine rockets for anti-submarine warfare. Helicopters were introduced in the late 1950s and 1960s and this fleet air arm remained an integral part of the fleet and its operations until an independent helicopter arm was created in the 1990s.
The 1972 decision made by the Government to decommission all destroyers and frigates within the next decade limited the Navy's endurance considerably, but the use of smaller short-range ships was at the time deemed adequate for anti-shipping missions along the coast and in the archipelago. In the 1980s, this assessment was proven wrong by repeated failures in anti-submarine warfare operations with inadequate ships and equipment. Today, the largest combat ships are corvettes which combine surface warfare, anti-submarine warfare and mine clearance functions with a better endurance and seaworthiness than the budget fleet from the 1980s.
Since the 1980s, Swedish surface warships have been named after Swedish cities, while submarines are named after Swedish provinces and minehunters after Swedish lighthouses. The surface ships are mostly small, relying on agility and flexibility. Examples of these are the Stockholm and Göteborg-class corvettes. The Navy is currently taking into service the new, larger, of stealth corvettes. A new submarine class,, similar to the older, was commissioned in 1998. Its air-independent Stirling engine enables submerged endurance never before seen in conventional submarines. Gotland has been on lease with crew and all to the US Navy and was based in San Diego.
The Amphibious Battalion is built around the Stridsbåt 90H, a small combat boat capable of carrying 21 troops for fast transports and landings in the archipelago. It is also equipped with larger transport boats, but relies on the Army, Navy and Air Force for heavy transports and protection. Cooperation with the Royal Netherlands Navy is under investigation for Amphibious Warfare.
The Swedish Armed Forces operate three types of helicopters: NHIndustries NH90 , AgustaWestland AW109 and Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk . Eight of the AgustaWestland AW109 helicopters have been modified to be operational from the Visby-class corvettes and. Nine of the NHIndustries NH90 helicopters are equipped with sonars and radars for anti-submarine warfare.
Upcoming investments
The next generation of submarines, the A26 class, was ordered from Saab Technologies in 2015 and will join the navy starting 2022. The two units will replace the submarines of. In parallel, the will undergo a mid-life upgrade.In 2017 a new intelligence ship to replace was ordered from Saab Technologies. The new ship is to be commissioned by 2020 and have a displacement of 2,300 tons.
An additional 18 units of the Swedish version of the named Stridsbåt 90HSM, where "M" stands for "modernized", wlll be delivered to the Amphibious Corps during the end of 2018. Like previous versions, the units will be built at Dockstavarvet.
Submarines
Surface vessels
Corvettes
Minesweepers
Patrol boats
Combat boats
Ocean patrol vessels
Signal intelligence vessels
Auxiliary vessels, major
Auxiliary vessels, others
- Landing craft
- *
- Tugs
- * Damen ASD3010 Coastal Tug
- * Damen ASD3010 Coastal Tug
- Torpedo salvage vessels
- *
- Transport ships
- * HSwMS Loke
- * HSwMS Nåttarö
- *600-class Fast Supply Vessels
- Hovercrafts
- *Griffon 2000TD Hovercrafts
Training ships
- Schooners
- *
- *
- Ships for navigation education
- *
- *
- *
- *
- *
Commanders
Chiefs of the Navy
- 1937–1939: Charles de Champs
- 1939–1945: Fabian Tamm
- 1945–1953: Helge Strömbäck
- 1953–1961:
- 1961–1970: Åke Lindemalm
- 1970–1978: Bengt Lundvall
- 1978–1984: Per Rudberg
- 1984–1990: Bengt Schuback
- 1990–1994: Dick Börjesson
Chiefs of Navy Staff
- 1995–1998: Peter Nordbeck
Inspectors General of the Navy
- 1998–2001: Torsten Lindh
- 2001–2003: Jörgen Ericsson
Inspectors of the Navy
- 2003–2005: Jörgen Ericsson
- 2005–2011: Anders Grenstad
- 2011–2013: Jan Thörnqvist
Chiefs of Navy
- 2014–2016: Jan Thörnqvist
- 2016–2020: Jens Nykvist
- 2020–present: Ewa Skoog Haslum