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{{Short description|Military of Switzerland}}
{{Refimprove|date=July 2007}}
{{Distinguish|Swiss Guard}}

{{Redirect|Swiss Army|the multi-function pocket knife|Swiss Army knife}}
{{Infobox National Military
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2023}}
|country=Switzerland
{{Infobox national military
|image=[[Image:CH Armee.png]]
| name = Swiss Armed Forces
|caption=
| native_name = {{unbulleted list|{{native name|de|Schweizer Armee}}|{{native name|fr|Armée suisse}}|{{native name|it|Esercito svizzero}}|{{native name|rm|Armada svizra}}}}
|founded=
| image = [[File:Swiss army logo 2023 DFIR.svg|300px]]
|current_form=
| alt =
|branches=
| caption =
|headquarters=
| image2 =
<!-- Leadership -->
| alt2 =
|commander-in-chief=
| caption2 =
|commander-in-chief_title=
| motto =
|minister=
| founded =
|minister_title=
| current_form =
|commander=
| disbanded =
|commander_title=
| branches = {{unbulleted list|{{flagdeco|Switzerland}} Swiss Army|{{air force|Switzerland}}}}
<!-- Manpower -->
| headquarters =
|age=17-34
| flying_hours =
|conscription=19-34 years of age obligatorily<br/>36 for subaltern officers, 52 for staff officers and higher
| website = {{URL|https://www.vtg.admin.ch/}}<br />{{URL|https://www.armee.ch/}}
|manpower_data=2005 est.
<!-- Leadership -->| commander-in-chief = [[File:Flag of a Swiss Armed Forces general and Chief of the Armed Forces.svg|x20px|Flag of the General]] Vacant in peacetime
|manpower_age=19–49
| commander-in-chief_title = [[General (Switzerland)|Commander-in-chief]]
|available=1,707,694
| chief minister =
|available_f=1,662,099
| chief minister_title =
|fit=1,375,889
| minister = [[Viola Amherd]]
|fit_f=1,342,945
| minister_title = [[Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport|Minister of Defence]]
|reaching=46,319
| commander = [[File:Flag of a Swiss Armed Forces general and Chief of the Armed Forces.svg|x20px|Flag of the Chief of the Armed Forces]] Lt Gen [[Thomas Süssli]]
|reaching_f=43,829
| commander_title = [[Chief of the Armed Forces (Switzerland)|Chief of the Armed Forces]]
|active=
<!-- Manpower -->| age = 19 years of age for male compulsory military service; 18 years of age for voluntary male and female military service;
|ranked=
| conscription = 19–34 years of age (males only)<br />40 for subaltern officers, 50 for staff officers and higher
|reserve=
| manpower_data =
|deployed=
| manpower_age = 18–49
<!-- Financial -->
| available = 969,000<ref name="Structure par âge de la population résidante permanente âgée de 15 ans ou plus, selon le statut migratoire et le sexe">[https://www.bfs.admin.ch/bfs/fr/home/statistiques/population/vieillissement.assetdetail.27965806.html] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231219064625/https://www.bfs.admin.ch/bfs/fr/home/statistiques/population/vieillissement.assetdetail.27965806.html |date=19 December 2023 }} "Office fédéral de la statistique" (in French). Retrieved 19 December 2023.</ref>
|amount=$3.1 billion (FY98)
| available_f = 930,000<ref name="Structure par âge de la population résidante permanente âgée de 15 ans ou plus, selon le statut migratoire et le sexe"/>
|percent_GDP=1 (2006 est.)
| reaching = 27,000<ref name="Structure par âge de la population résidante permanente âgée de 15 ans ou plus, selon le statut migratoire et le sexe"/>
<!-- Industrial -->
| reaching_f = 23,000<ref name="Structure par âge de la population résidante permanente âgée de 15 ans ou plus, selon le statut migratoire et le sexe"/>
|domestic_suppliers=
| active = 147,178<ref name="vbs27feb2024">[https://www.vbs.admin.ch/de/vbs-in-zahlen] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240120081502/https://www.vbs.admin.ch/de/vbs-in-zahlen |date=20 January 2024 }} "Eidgenössiches Departement für Verteidigung, Bevölkerungsschutz und Sport" (in German). Retrieved 27 February 2024.</ref>
|foreign_suppliers=
| reserve =
|imports=
| amount = [[Swiss franc|CHF]] 5.5 billion (~{{US$|6.25 billion}}, 2024) <ref name="vbs27feb2024"/>
|exports=
| percent_GDP = 0.68% (2018)<ref>[https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/switzerland/ The World Factbook – Switzerland] ''Central Intelligence Agency'', Retrieved 23 May 2020</ref>
<!-- Related aricles -->
<!-- Industrial -->| domestic_suppliers = {{unbulleted list|[[MOWAG]]|[[RUAG]]|[[SIG Holding|SIG]]|[[Swiss Arms]]}}
|history=
| foreign_suppliers =
|ranks=
| imports =
| exports = <!-- Related articles -->
| history =
| ranks = [[Military ranks of Switzerland]]
}}
}}


The '''Swiss Armed Forces''' ({{langx|de|Schweizer Armee}}; {{langx|fr|Armée suisse}}; {{langx|it|Esercito svizzero}}; {{langx|rm|Armada svizra}}; {{literally|Swiss Army}}) are the [[military]] and [[National security|security]] force of [[Switzerland]], consisting of land and [[Swiss Air Force|air service]] branches. Under the country's militia system, [[soldier|regular soldiers]] constitute a small part of the military and the rest are conscripts or volunteers aged 19 to 34 (in some cases up to 50). Because of [[Swiss neutrality|Switzerland's long history of neutrality]], the Swiss Armed Forces have not been involved in foreign wars since the early 19th century, but do participate in [[Peacekeeping|international peacekeeping missions]]. Switzerland is part of the NATO [[Partnership for Peace]] programme.<ref>[http://www.gipri.ch/publications/cahiers/cahier2/ Frontières entre police et armée] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161018144859/http://www.gipri.ch/publications/cahiers/cahier2/ |date=18 October 2016}}, Cahier du GIPRI, n° 2, 2004</ref>
[[Image:Swiss Army marching Fcb981.JPG|thumb|A Swiss army exercise near Glarus, Switzerland.]]
The military of [[Switzerland]], officially known as the '''Swiss Armed Forces''', is a unique institution somewhere between a [[militia]] and a regular [[army]]. It is equipped with mostly modern, sophisticated, and well-maintained weapons systems and equipment.


The regulations of the Swiss militia system stipulate that the soldiers keep their own personal equipment, including all personally assigned weapons, at home or in an armoury; until 2007 this also included ammunition.<ref>[http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/Specials/Gun_debate/Background/Archives/Soldiers_can_keep_guns_at_home_but_not_ammo.html?cid=970614 SwissInfo] Soldiers can keep guns at home but not ammo {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121002064014/http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/Specials/Gun_debate/Background/Archives/Soldiers_can_keep_guns_at_home_but_not_ammo.html?cid=970614|date=2 October 2012}} ''Swissinfo''</ref> [[Conscription in Switzerland|Compulsory military service]] applies to all male Swiss citizens, with women serving voluntarily. Males usually receive initial orders at the age of 18 for military conscription eligibility screening. About two-thirds of young Swiss men are found suitable for service, while alternative service exists for those found unsuitable.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nzz.ch/nachrichten/schweiz/zwei_drittel_der_rekruten_diensttauglich_1.687233.html |title=Zwei Drittel der Rekruten diensttauglich |work=[[Neue Zürcher Zeitung|NZZ]] |date=11 March 2008 |access-date=23 February 2009 |language=de}}</ref> Annually, approximately 20,000 persons undergo [[Recruit training|basic training]] for 18 weeks (23 weeks for special forces).
==History==
{{main|Military history of Switzerland}}
The Swiss army originated from the cantonal troops of the [[Old Swiss Confederacy]], called upon in cases of external threats by the [[Tagsatzung]] or by the canton in distress. In the [[Restauration (Switzerland)|federal treaty]] of 1815, the Tagsatzung prescribed cantonal troops to put a contingent of 2% of the population of each canton at the federation's disposition, amounting to a force of some 33,000 men. The cantonal armies were converted into the federal army (''Bundesheer'') with the [[Swiss Federal Constitution|constitution]] of 1848. From this time, it was illegal for the individual cantons to declare war or to sign capitulations or peace agreements. Paragraph 13 explicitly prohibited the federation from sustaining a [[standing army]], and the cantons were allowed a maximum standing force of 300 each (not including the ''Landjäger'' corps, a kind of police force). Paragraph 18 declared the obligation of every Swiss citizen to serve in the federal army if conscripted (''Wehrpflicht''), setting its size at 3% of the population plus a reserve of one and one half that number, amounting to a total force of some 80,000.


In 2003, the reform "Army XXI" replaced the previous model "Army 95" and was adopted by popular vote, reducing manpower from 400,000 to about 200,000 personnel, with 120,000 receiving periodic military training and 80,000 reservists who have completed their total military training requirements.<ref>[http://www.vbs.admin.ch/internet/vbs/de/home/documentation/armeezahlen/eff.html Armeezahlen www.vbs.admin.ch] {{Webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090909112719/http://www.vbs.admin.ch/internet/vbs/de/home/documentation/armeezahlen/eff.html |date=9 September 2009}} (German)</ref> A further reform effective in 2018 heralded the reduction of forces to 100,000 members.
The first [[mobilization|complete mobilization]], under the command of [[Hans Herzog]], was triggered by the [[Franco-Prussian War]] in 1871. In 1875, the army was called in to crush a strike of workers at the [[Gotthard Rail Tunnel|Gotthard tunnel]]. Four workers were killed and 13 were severely wounded.


==History==
Paragraph 19 of the revised constitution of 1874 extended the definition of the federal army to every able-bodied citizen, swelling the size of the army at least in theory from below 150,000 to more than 700,000, with population growth during the 20th century rising further to some 1.5 million, the second largest armed force ''per capita'' after the [[Israeli Defence Forces]].
{{Main|Military history of Switzerland}}
[[File:Schlacht bei Sempach Aquarell 1513 crop.jpg|thumb|The [[Battle of Sempach]], 1386]]
[[File:Abfertigen einer Meldung durch Brieftauben - CH-BAR - 3240471 - restoration.jpg|Swiss soldiers with [[war pigeon]]s during [[World War I]]|thumb]]
The land component of the Swiss Armed Forces originated from the cantonal troops of the [[Old Swiss Confederacy]], called upon in cases of external threats by the [[Tagsatzung]] or by the canton in distress. In the [[Restoration (Switzerland)|federal treaty]] of 1815, the Tagsatzung prescribed [[Militia System|cantonal troops]] to put a contingent of 2% of the population of each canton at the federation's disposition, amounting to a force of some 33,000 men. The cantonal armies were converted into the federal army (''Bundesheer'') with the [[Swiss constitution 1848|constitution]] of 1848. From this time, it was illegal for the individual cantons to declare war or to sign [[Capitulation (treaty)|capitulation]]s or peace agreements. Paragraph 13 explicitly prohibited the federation from sustaining a [[standing army]], and the cantons were allowed a maximum standing force of 300 each (not including the ''Landjäger'' corps, a kind of police force). Paragraph 18 declared the "obligation" of every Swiss citizen to serve in the federal army if conscripted (''Wehrpflicht''), setting its size at 3% of the population plus a [[Swiss Reserve|reserve]] of one and one half that number, amounting to a total force of some 80,000.


[[File:Clemens-1896-swiss army.png|thumb|left|A Swiss Army exercise in 1896, as depicted by Joseph Clemens Kaufmann]]
A major [[maneuver]] commanded in 1912 by [[Ulrich Wille]], a reputed [[germanophile]], convinced visiting European heads of state, in particular [[Kaiser Wilhelm II]], of the efficacy and determination of the Swiss defense. Wille subsequently was put in command of the second complete mobilization, and Switzerland escaped invasion in the course of [[World War I]]. Wille also ordered the suppression of the general strike (''[[Landesstreik]]'') of 1918 with military force. Three workers were killed, and a rather larger number of soldiers died of the [[Spanish flu]] during mobilization. In 1932, the army was called to suppress an anti-fascist demonstration in Geneva. The troops shot 13 unarmed demonstrators, wounding another 65. This incident permanently damaged the army's reputation, leading to persisting calls for its abolition among left wing politicians. In both the 1918 and the 1932 incidents, the troops deployed were consciously selected from rural regions such as the [[Berner Oberland]], fanning the enmity between the traditionally conservative rural population and the urban working class. The third complete mobilization of the army took place during [[World War II]] under the command of [[Henri Guisan]] (see also [[Switzerland during the World Wars]]).
The first complete [[mobilization]], under the command of [[Hans Herzog]], was triggered by the [[Franco-Prussian War]] in 1871. In 1875, the army was called in to crush a strike of workers at the [[Gotthard Rail Tunnel|Gotthard tunnel]]. Four workers were killed and 13 were severely wounded.


Paragraph 19 of the revised constitution of 1874 extended the definition of the federal army to every able-bodied male citizen, which would have swollen the size of the army, had it not been replaced by later revisions, from under 150,000 to more than 700,000, with population growth during the 20th century rising further to some 1.5 million,{{Citation needed|date=May 2022}} the second largest armed force ''per capita''{{How|date=May 2022}} after the [[Israel Defense Forces]].{{Citation needed|date=May 2022}}
In 1989, the status of the army as a national icon was shaken by a [[popular initiative]] aiming at its complete dissolution (see: ''[[Group for a Switzerland without an Army]]'') receiving 35.6% support. This triggered a series of reforms, and in 1995, the number of troops was reduced to 400,000 ("Armee 95"). Article 58.1 of the 1999 constitution repeats that the army is "in principle" organized as a militia, implicitly allowing a small number of professional soldiers. A second initiative aimed at the army's dissolution in 2001 received a mere 21.9% support. Nevertheless, the army was shrunk again in 2004, to 220,000 men ("Armee XXI"), including the reserves.


[[File:Schweizer Militärmarke.jpg|thumb|upright|Military badge belonging to Julien Wyler, 1929, in the collection of the [[Jewish Museum of Switzerland]]]]
== Military services ==
Prior to the revised constitution, [[History of the Jews in Switzerland|Jews in Switzerland]] were excluded from the army, with various exceptions and special conditions through the years. In 1808, the laws of mandatory military service were particularly strict for [[Jews]], who, unlike [[Christians]], could not opt to be replaced by a volunteer. During this time, Jews were not considered to be Swiss citizens. Following the introduction of Jewish corporations in 1813, they were given separate documentation for military enlistment. A special rule in 1816 demanded that the Jews should pay an equipment contribution of 1000 francs per year (400 francs in 1808). From 1852 onwards, Jews served in the army like other Swiss citizens, and the constitution of 1874 removed all remaining discriminatory measures.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Weldler-Steinberg |first=Augusta |title=Geschichte der Juden in der Schweiz: Vom 16. Jahrhundert bis nach der Emanzipation |publisher=Schweizerischer Israelitischer Gemeindebund |year=1966 |pages=166–168 |language=de}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Battegay |first1=Caspar |last2=Lubrichy |first2=Naomi |title=Jewish Switzerland: 50 Objects Tell Their Stories |publisher=Christoph Merian |year=2018 |isbn=978-3-85616-847-6 |location=Basel |page=146 |language=en, de}}</ref>


A major [[Military exercise|manoeuvre]] commanded in 1912 by [[Ulrich Wille]], a reputed [[Germanophile]], convinced visiting European heads of state, in particular [[Kaiser Wilhelm II]], of the efficacy and determination of Swiss defences.<ref>{{HDS|8926<!--Section 3-1-->|World War I–Preparation}}</ref> Wille was subsequently put in command of the second complete mobilization in 1914, and Switzerland escaped invasion in the course of [[World War I]]. Wille also ordered the suppression of the 1918 general strike (''[[Landesstreik]]'') with military force. Three workers were killed, and a rather larger number of soldiers died of the [[Spanish flu]] during mobilization. In 1932, the army was called to suppress an anti-fascist demonstration in Geneva. The troops shot dead 13 demonstrators, wounding another 65. This incident long damaged the army's reputation, leading to persistent calls for its abolition among left-wing politicians. In both the 1918 and the 1932 incidents, the troops deployed were consciously selected from rural regions such as the [[Berner Oberland]], fanning the enmity between the traditionally conservative rural population and the urban working class. The third complete mobilization of the army took place during [[World War II]] under the command of [[Henri Guisan]] (see also [[Switzerland during the World Wars]]). The [[Patrouille des Glaciers]] race, created to test the abilities of soldiers, was created during the war.
<div class="messagebox cleanup metadata">This article or section '''seems not to be written in the formal tone expected of an encyclopedia entry'''.<br /><span style="font-size:90%">Please improve the article or discuss proposed changes on the [[{{TALKPAGENAME}}|talk page]]. See Wikipedia's [[Wikipedia:Guide to writing better articles|guide to writing better articles]] for suggestions.</span></div><includeonly>{{{category|}}}</includeonly><noinclude>


[[File:Kavallerieschwadron 1972.jpg|thumb|left|Veterans' dragoons squadron in 2006, presenting the uniform of 1972]]
*Swiss Army
*[[Swiss Air Force]]
[[Image:Milouf-suisse.jpg|thumb|In a railway station, a young Swiss militia soldier returning to duty after a week-end break]]
On [[May 18]], [[2003]], Swiss voters approved the military reform project "cha cha XXW" to drastically reduce the size of the Swiss Army. Starting in January 2004, the 524,000-strong militia was pared down to 220,000 conscripts, including 80,000 reservists. The defence budget of SFr 4.3 billion ($3.1 billion) was trimmed by SFr 300 million and some 22,000 jobs are expected to be shed between 2004 and 2011.


In the 1960s and 1970s, the armed forces were organised according to the "Armee 61" structure. Horse mounted [[cavalry]] (specifically [[dragoon]]s) were retained for combat roles until 1973, and were the [[Dragoon#Switzerland|last non-ceremonial horse cavalry]] in Europe, as were [[bicycle infantry]] battalions until 2001.<ref>
The armed forces consist of a small nucleus of about 3,600 professional staff, half of whom are either instructors or staff officers, with the rest being conscripts or volunteers. All able-bodied Swiss males aged between 19 and 31 must serve, and although entry to recruit school may be delayed due to senior secondary school, it is no longer possible to postpone it for university studies. About one third is excluded for various reasons, and these either serve in [[Civil defence|Civil Protection]] or [[Swiss Civilian Service|Civilian Service]].
{{cite news
|first=Claire
|last=Doole
|work=BBC News
|title=End of road for Swiss army cyclists
|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/1325485.stm
|access-date=5 February 2008
|date=11 May 2001
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170831155131/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/1325485.stm
|archive-date=31 August 2017
|url-status=live}}
</ref>


Since 1989, there have been several attempts to curb military activity or even abolish the armed forces altogether. A notable referendum on the subject was held on 26 November 1989 and, although defeated, did see a significant percentage of the voters in favour of such an initiative.<ref>{{cite web |title=L'évolution de la politique de sécurité de la Suisse |url=http://www.nato.int/docu/revue/1993/9306-05.htm |language=fr |publisher=NATO |access-date=12 July 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090513114556/http://www.nato.int//docu/revue/1993/9306-05.htm |archive-date=13 May 2009 |url-status=live}}</ref> However, a similar referendum, called for before, but held shortly after the [[11 September attacks]] in 2001 in the US, was defeated by over 77% of voters.<ref name="2-12">{{cite web |title=Volksabstimmung vom 2. Dezember 2001 |url=http://www.admin.ch/ch/d/pore/va/20011202/det482.html |language=de |publisher=Federal Chancellery |access-date=12 July 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100815050830/http://www.admin.ch/ch/d/pore/va/20011202/det482.html |archive-date=15 August 2010 |url-status=live}}</ref>
Recruits have the right to be instructed in their native language; however, because of the small number of Romansch-speaking recruits, they are instructed in German.


In 1989, the status of the army as a national icon was shaken by a [[popular initiative]] aiming at its complete dissolution (see: ''[[Group for a Switzerland without an Army]]'') receiving 35.6% support. This triggered a series of reforms and, in 1995, the number of troops was reduced to 400,000 ("Armee 95"). Article 58.1 of the 1999 constitution repeats that the army is "in principle" organized as a militia, implicitly allowing a small number of professional soldiers. A second initiative aimed at the army's dissolution in late 2001 received a mere 21.9% support.<ref name="2-12"/> Nevertheless, the army was shrunk again in 2004, to 220,000 men ("Armee XXI"), including the [[Swiss Reserve|reserves]].
For women, military service is voluntary, and they can join all services, including combat units. About 2,000 women already serve in the army but, until the "Armee XXI" reform, were not allowed to use weapons for purposes other than self-defence. Since the reform, women can take on any position within the armed forces.


In 2016, the [[Federal Assembly (Switzerland)|Swiss Federal Assembly]] voted to further reduce the army from 140,000 men to 100,000 men, reducing the time of basic training from 21 weeks to 18, but also to increase the military budget by 2.4 billion [[Swiss franc]]s.<ref>{{cite web | title=Army Reforms Given Green Light by Parliament | url=http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/politics/swiss-military_army-reforms-given-green-light-by-parliament/42006598 | date=7 March 2016 | website=[[Swissinfo]] | access-date=31 March 2016 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160411164431/http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/politics/swiss-military_army-reforms-given-green-light-by-parliament/42006598 | archive-date=11 April 2016 | url-status=live}}</ref> In 2022, the Assembly voted to increase spending by 1.4 billion Swiss francs by 2030, or at least 1% of the country's GDP.<ref>{{cite web | title=Parliament approves boost in Swiss army spending | website=SWI swissinfo.ch | date=2 June 2022 | url=https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/politics/parliament-approves-boost-in-swiss-army-spending/47643056 | access-date=6 September 2023}}</ref> The government planned to spend up to 50 billion Swiss francs on defense through the early 2030s.<ref>{{cite web | last=Benrath | first=Bastian | title=Swiss Army Wants to Ramp Up Spending on Growing Europe Threats | website=Bloomberg.com | date=17 August 2023 | url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-08-17/swiss-army-wants-to-ramp-up-spending-on-growing-europe-threats | access-date=18 January 2024}}</ref> In 2024, the Armed Forces was projected to face significant funding shortfalls.<ref>{{cite web | title=Media report: Swiss army to face big financial issues in coming years | website=SWI swissinfo.ch | date=1 February 2024 | url=https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/politics/media-report--swiss-army-to-face-big-financial-issues-in-coming-years/49176810 | access-date=5 February 2024}}</ref>
Due to the small size of the Swiss Air Force, competition to become an aircraft pilot is extremely high. Candidate pilots and parachutists have to start training in their own free time from the age of 16, well before recruitment. However, if candidates appear at recruitment with a certificate showing completion of preliminary training, they are practically guaranteed that duty, provided they pass the following selection during service. Aspiring pilots must however first complete basic training in a regular unit and complete officer school before entering into a unit of candidate pilots.


== Personnel ==
The army has established a new category of soldiers, called "single-term conscripts," who volunteer to serve a single term of 300 days of active duty. The total number of single-term conscripts cannot exceed 15% of a year's draft, and these volunteers can only serve in certain branches of the military. The rest continue to follow the traditional Swiss model of serving from 18 to 21 weeks at first and then doing a service, called repetition course, of three weeks (four for officers) per year until they serve the required number of days or reach the age of 26. After completition of their service days, they become reservists until they reach the age of 23.
{{Further|Military ranks of Switzerland}}


As of 1 March 2017, the Swiss Armed Forces consist of 120,496 people on [[active duty]] (in Switzerland called ''Angehöriger der Armee'', shortly ''AdA'', engl.: ''Member of the Armed Forces''), of which 9,163 are professionals, with the rest being conscripts or volunteers.<ref name="basics">{{cite web|url=https://www.vbs.admin.ch/de/vbs/zahlen-fakten/armee.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200205163220/https://www.vbs.admin.ch/de/vbs/zahlen-fakten/armee.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=5 February 2020|title=Die Schweizer Armee in Zahlen|publisher=Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports|language=de|trans-title=The Swiss Armed Forces in Numbers|access-date=29 May 2019}} Updated annually.</ref> Women, for whom military service is voluntary, numbered 929: less than 1% of the total, with over 25% thereof being officers.<ref name="basics"/> The numbers had increased by 2021. Once in service, women have the same rights and duties as their male colleagues, and they can join all services, including combat units. Recruits in multi-lingual Switzerland are usually instructed in their native language, except that the small number of [[Romansh language|Romansh]]-speaking recruits are instructed in German.
Soldiers can be required to advance in rank, usually to Sergeant, Sergeant Major, Fourier or Lieutenant. This is often required of Italian-speaking soldiers, because they make up a minority in the population and the armed forces, and there is a need for Italian-speaking officers. A higher rank typically entails a longer service time, which results in some wishing to avoid promotion.


In contrast to most other comparable armed forces, officers are generally not career regulars. Under the most recent army reform, all soldiers complete a full recruit school of 18 weeks.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://www.vtg.admin.ch/content/vtg-internet/fr/aktuell/themen/die-weiterentwicklung-der-armee/_jcr_content/inpagenav/items/deva_flyer/tabPar/downloadlist_copy_96/downloadItems/25_1516194642978.download/83_231_f_Flyer_Ausbildungsmodell.pdf|title=Le modèle d'instruction et de service de l'Armée suisse|website=Swiss Armed Forces|access-date=10 December 2019}}{{Dead link|date=December 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes}}</ref> During the initial 18-week training period, recruits may volunteer for consideration to continue with NCO training.<ref name=":0" /> After the completion of NCO training, individuals are promoted to sergeant and integrated into platoons at recruit schools as squad leaders (''Gruppenchefs'', ''Chefs de Groupe'', ''Capogruppi''). Squad leaders support their platoon commanders for the 18-week duration of the recruit school, with the exception of those who volunteer for officer school—they leave after 7 weeks of service as squad leaders—while those who volunteer for higher NCO school leave after 12 weeks of service as squad leaders. Officer candidates complete a 15-week course to prepare them for their role as platoon leaders (''Zugführer'', ''Chef de section'', ''Caposezione''), which traditionally culminates in a march covering {{convert|100|km|mi}} in 24 hours. After promotion to lieutenant, platoon leaders return to their recruit schools, where they take charge of a recruit school platoon for 18 weeks.<ref name=":0" />
With the new reform, if a soldier is promoted to sergeant, during the base instruction he can no longer advance to lieutenant and onwards, as they now follow two separate branches of development. However, many soldiers still prefer this, mainly because of a shorter service time (compared to lieutenants) but also because they have a more active, up-close role with the other troops as regular soldiers, instead of managing from a distance as officers. During repetition courses, however, there is the possibility for soldiers and non commissioned officers to advance either to NCO's or to officer grades.


There were about 15,000 officers and 29,000 NCOs in the Swiss Armed Forces in 2021.<ref name="basics" /> Those of higher rank serve for longer each year; a private may serve 365 days over 30 years, while a high-ranking officer may serve 2,000 days before retiring. Each promotion requires more time, which is known as "paying your rank". This describes the mechanism of a soldier fulfilling their rank's minimal service time after being promoted into said rank. Companies subsidize military training by continuing to pay their employees, who list their ranks and responsibilities on their résumés.<ref name="mcphee19831031">{{cite news | url=http://archives.newyorker.com/default.aspx?iid=16248&startpage=page0000103#folio=050 | title=La Place de la Concorde Suisse-I | magazine=The New Yorker | date=31 October 1983 | access-date=22 July 2013 | author=McPhee, John | pages=50 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140714230210/http://archives.newyorker.com/default.aspx?iid=16248&startpage=page0000103#folio=050 | archive-date=14 July 2014 | url-status=live}}</ref>
Men who want to apply for service in the [[Swiss Guard#Papal Swiss Guard|Swiss Guard]] need to have completed their basic military service in Switzerland, and are also required to be Catholic.


In January 2023, the Swiss Armed Forces began integrating Muslim and Jewish [[Military chaplain|chaplains]] into the service. The army's chaplaincy had only been open to Catholics and Protestants until then. New insignia have been created for military jackets: the [[Star and crescent|Islamic crescent]] for Muslims and the [[Tablets of Stone]] for Jews.<ref>{{cite web |author=RCH |title=L'Aumônerie de l'armée est désormais ouverte aux non-chrétiens |url=https://www.rtn.ch/rtn/Actualite/Region/20230110-L-Aumonerie-de-l-armee-est-desormais-ouverte-aux-non-chretiens.html |access-date=25 November 2023 |website=www.rtn.ch |date=10 January 2023 |language=fr-CH}}</ref>
=== Naval Patrol ===
{{redirect|Swiss Navy|the Swiss Merchant Navy|Merchant Marine of Switzerland}}
Being [[landlocked]], Switzerland does not have a [[navy]], but it does maintain a fleet of military patrol boats, numbering 10 in 2006. They patrol the [[list of lakes in Switzerland|Swiss lakes]]: [[Lake Geneva]], [[Lake Lucerne]], [[Lake Lugano]], [[Lago Maggiore|Lake Major]] and [[Lake Constance]]. These boats are sometimes humorously referred to as the "Swiss Navy".


===Conscription===
==Defence ministers==
{{Main|Conscription in Switzerland}}
Members of the [[Swiss Federal Council|Federal Council]] heading the "Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports" (formerly "Federal Military Department") is the Swiss [[defence minister]]:
Switzerland has mandatory military service for all able-bodied male [[Swiss citizen|citizens]], who are [[conscription|conscripted]] when they reach the [[age of majority]],<ref>{{cite web |title=Conscrits et recrues |url=http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/fr/home/militaerdienst/rekrut.html |language=fr |publisher=[[Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports]] |access-date=10 July 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090502061315/http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/fr/home/militaerdienst/rekrut.html |archive-date=2 May 2009}}</ref> though women may volunteer for any position.<ref>{{cite web |title=Femmes dans l'armée |url=http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/fr/home/militaerdienst/fda.html |language=fr |publisher=Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports |access-date=10 July 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090502010612/http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/fr/home/militaerdienst/fda.html |archive-date=2 May 2009}}</ref> Since 1996, conscripts who are found to be sufficiently fit for regular military service, but who object for reasons of conscience, can apply for ''[[civilian service]]''. This service consists of various kinds of social services, such as reconstructing cultural sites, helping the elderly and other activities removed from military connotations. Civilian service lasts 340 days, 50% longer than a soldier's regular army service.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vcampus-armee.ch/imperia/isa/rekr/ziversatz/info/00918/content_f.shtml|title=Ziviler Ersatzdienst|publisher=Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports|language=fr|access-date=10 July 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080228134838/http://www.vcampus-armee.ch/imperia/isa/rekr/ziversatz/info/00918/content_f.shtml|archive-date=28 February 2008|url-status=dead}}</ref>
<table><tr valign=top><td>
*1848-1854: [[Ulrich Ochsenbein]]
*1855-1859: [[Friedrich Frey-Herosé]]
*1860-1861: [[Jakob Stämpfli]]
*1862 only: [[Constant Fornerod]]
*1863 only: [[Jakob Stämpfli]]
*1864-1866: [[Constant Fornerod]]
*1867-1868: [[Emil Welti]]
*1869 only: [[Victor Ruffy]]
*1870-1871: [[Emil Welti]]
*1872 only: [[Paul Cérésole]]
*1873-1875: [[Emil Welti]]
*1876-1878: [[Johann Jakob Scherer]]
*1879-1888: [[Wilhelm Hertenstein]]
*1889-1890: [[Walter Hauser]]
*1891-1897: [[Emil Frey]]
*1897-1898: [[Eduard Müller]]
*1899 only: [[Eugène Ruffy]]</td>


People determined unfit for service, where fitness is defined as "satisfying physical, intellectual and psychological requirements for military service or civil protection service and being capable of accomplishing these services without harming oneself or others",<ref>{{cite web |title=Définition de l'aptitude au service |url=http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/fr/home/militaerdienst/rekrut/diensttauglichkeit/definition.html |language=fr |publisher=Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports |access-date=10 July 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090502102130/http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/fr/home/militaerdienst/rekrut/diensttauglichkeit/definition.html |archive-date=2 May 2009}}</ref> are exempted from service, but pay 11 installments of a 3% additional annual [[income tax]] until the age of 37 unless they are affected by a [[disability]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Ordonnance sur la taxe d'exemption de l'obligation de servir |url=http://www.admin.ch/ch/f/rs/661_1/index.html |language=fr |publisher=Federal Authorities of the Swiss Confederation |access-date=10 July 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091114163138/http://www.admin.ch/ch/f/rs/661_1/index.html |archive-date=14 November 2009 |url-status=live}}</ref> Conscripts found to be sufficiently unfit for regular military service, but not for exemption, take part in ''[[civil protection]]'', where they may be called on to assist the police, fire or health departments, as well as natural disaster relief and crowd control during demonstrations or events with large attendance.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bevoelkerungsschutz.admin.ch/internet/bs/fr/home/partner/zivilschutz.html|title=Protection civile|publisher=Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports|language=fr|access-date=10 July 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090430072242/http://www.bevoelkerungsschutz.admin.ch/internet/bs/fr/home/partner/zivilschutz.html|archive-date=30 April 2009|url-status=dead}}</ref>
<td>
*1900-1906: [[Eduard Müller]]
*1907 only: [[Ludwig Forrer]]
*1908-1911: [[Eduard Müller]]
*1912-1913: [[Arthur Hoffmann]]
*1914-1919: [[Camille Decoppet]]
*1920-1929: [[Karl Scheurer]]
*1930-1940: [[Rudolf Minger]]
*1940-1954: [[Karl Kobelt]]
*1955-1966: [[Paul Chaudet]]
*1967-1968: [[Nello Celio]]
*1968-1979: [[Rudolf Gnägi]]
*1980-1983: [[Georges-André Chevallaz]]
*1984-1986: [[Jean-Pascal Delamuraz]]
*1987-1989: [[Arnold Koller]]
*1989-1995: [[Kaspar Villiger]]
*1996-2000: [[Adolf Ogi]]
*Since 2001: [[Samuel Schmid]]</td></tr></table>


Almost 20% of all conscripts were found unfit for military or civilian service in 2008; the rate is generally higher in urban cantons such as [[Canton of Zurich|Zurich]] and [[Canton of Geneva|Geneva]] than in rural ones.<ref>{{cite web |title=Les chiffres du recrutement en 2008 |url=http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/fr/home/dokumentation/news/newsdetail.24787.nsb.html |language=fr |publisher=Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports |access-date=10 July 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110724085052/http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/fr/home/dokumentation/news/newsdetail.24787.nsb.html |archive-date=24 July 2011}}</ref> [[Fifth Switzerland|Swiss citizens living abroad]] are generally exempted from conscription in peacetime.<ref>{{cite web |title=Les Suisses de l'étranger |url=http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/fr/home/militaerdienst/rekrut/wehrpflicht/auslandschweizer.html |language=fr |publisher=Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports |access-date=10 July 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090425064647/http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/fr/home/militaerdienst/rekrut/wehrpflicht/auslandschweizer.html |archive-date=25 April 2009}}</ref> [[Dual citizenship]] does not grant exemption.<ref>{{cite web |title=Doubles-nationaux |url=http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/fr/home/militaerdienst/rekrut/wehrpflicht/doppelb.html |language=fr |publisher=Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports |access-date=10 July 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090426105510/http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/fr/home/militaerdienst/rekrut/wehrpflicht/doppelb.html |archive-date=26 April 2009}}</ref>
==Ranks==
{{main|Swiss army ranks}}


On 22 September 2013, a [[Referendums in Switzerland|referendum]] was held that aimed to [[2013 Swiss referendums|abolish conscription]] in Switzerland.<ref>[http://www.parlament.ch/d/wahlen-abstimmungen/volksabstimmungen/volksabstimmungen-2013/abstimmung-2013-09-22/seiten/default.aspx Referendums on 22 September 2013] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140306000438/http://www.parlament.ch/d/wahlen-abstimmungen/volksabstimmungen/volksabstimmungen-2013/abstimmung-2013-09-22/seiten/default.aspx |date=6 March 2014}} Swiss Parliament, 28 June 2013. Retrieved, 4 March 2014{{in lang|de}}</ref> With a turnout of 47% on this particular question, over 73% voted against eliminating conscription.
<!-- [[:de:Dienstgrade in der Schweizer Armee]] [[:fr:Grades de l'armée suisse]] -->
Rank designations in [[German language|German]], [[French language|French]] and [[Italian language|Italian]] with abbreviations and corresponding [[Ranks and insignia of NATO armies officers|NATO codes]]:


== Structure since 2018 ==
Enlisted:
{{Main|Structure of the Swiss Armed Forces}}
*Rekrut (Rekr) / recrue (recr) / recluta (recl)
[[File:Thomas Süssli in 2019.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Thomas Süssli]], chief of the Swiss Armed Forces since 2020]]
*Soldat (Sdt) / soldat (sdt) / soldato (sdt)
[[File:Swiss Armed Forces structure since 2018.png|thumb|right|Structure of the Swiss Army, 2018 (click to enlarge)]]
*Gefreiter (Gfr) / appointé (app) / appuntato (app)
*Obergefreiter (Obgfr) / appointé-chef (app chef) / appuntato capo


In peacetime, the Swiss Armed Forces are led by the [[Chief of the Armed Forces (Switzerland)|Chief of the Armed Forces]] (''Chef der Armee''), who reports to the head of the [[Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport]] and to the [[Swiss Federal Council]] as a whole. The current Chief of the Armed Forces is [[Lieutenant-General]] (''[[Korpskommandant]]'') [[Thomas Süssli]]. Lt-Gen Süssli replaced Lieutenant-General (''Korpskommandant'') [[Philippe Rebord]] on 1 January 2020.
Non-commissioned officers:
* Korporal (Kpl) / caporal (cpl) / caporale (cpl)
* Wachtmeister (Wm) / sergent (sgt) / sergente (sgt)
* Oberwachtmeister (Obwm) / sergent-chef (sgt chef) / sergente capo
* Feldwebel (Fw) / sergent-major (sgtm) / sergente maggiore
* Fourier (Four) / fourrier (four) / furiere
* Hauptfeldwebel (Hptfw) / sergent-major chef (sgtm chef) / sergente maggiore capo
* Adjutant Unteroffizier (Adj Uof) / adjudant sous-officier (adj sof) / aiutante sottoufficiale
* Stabsadjutant (Stabsadj) / adjudant d’état-major (adj EM) / aiutante di stato maggiore
* Hauptadjutant (Hptadj) / adjudant-major (adj maj) / aiutante maggiore
* Chefadjutant (Chefadj) / adjudant-chef (adj chef) / aiutante capo


* '''[[Chief of the Armed Forces (Switzerland)|Chief of the Armed Forces]]''', in [[Bern]]<ref>{{cite web |title=Swiss Armed Forces – Organisation and Structure |url=https://www.vtg.admin.ch/en/die-schweizer-armee/gliederung.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200925101920/https://www.vtg.admin.ch/en/die-schweizer-armee/gliederung.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=25 September 2020 |publisher=Swiss Armed Forces |access-date=6 May 2020}}</ref>
Subaltern officers:
**[[File:Joint Operations Command badge.svg|25px]] Joint Operations Command, in Bern<ref>{{cite web |title=Lieutenant General Aldo C. Schellenberg |url=https://www.vtg.admin.ch/en/die-schweizer-armee/hoehere-stabsoffiziere/hso/schellenberg-aldo.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200920215710/https://www.vtg.admin.ch/en/die-schweizer-armee/hoehere-stabsoffiziere/hso/schellenberg-aldo.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=20 September 2020 |publisher=Swiss Armed Forces |access-date=6 May 2020}}</ref>
* OF-1 Leutnant (Lt) / lieutenant (lt) / tenente (ten)
** [[File:Command Training badge.svg|25px]] Training and Education Command, in Bern
* OF-1 Oberleutnant (Oblt) / premier-lieutenant (plt) / primo tenente (Iten)
** Armed Forces Command Support Organisation, in Bern
** Armed Forces Logistics Organisation, in Bern
** Armed Forces Staff, in Bern
*** Medical Service, in [[Ittigen]]


In times of crisis or war, the [[Federal Assembly of Switzerland|Federal Assembly]] elects a full [[General (Switzerland)|General]] ([[Comparative military ranks|OF-9]]) as [[Commander-in-Chief]] of the Armed Forces (''Oberbefehlshaber der Armee''). The rank is distinct and particular, as it is associated exclusively with wartime fighting or a national crisis due to war among Switzerland's neighbouring countries.{{r|mcphee19831031}}
Captain:
* OF-2 Hauptmann (Hptm) / capitaine (cap) / capitano (cap)


{{Location map many | Switzerland
Staff officers:
| width = 300
* OF-3 Major (Maj) / major (maj) / maggiore (magg)
| float = right
* OF-4 Oberstleutnant (Oberstlt) / lieutenant-colonel (lt col) / tenente colonnello
| caption = Swiss Army brigades<ref>{{cite web |title=Verordnung über die Strukturen der Armee (VSA) |url=https://www.newsd.admin.ch/newsd/message/attachments/47740.pdf |website=admin.ch |publisher=Der Bundesrat |language=de |date=29 March 2017}}</ref>
* OF-5 Oberst / colonel (col) / colonnello
| label2 = <small>{{nowrap|[[Aarau|4th Mechanized Bde.]]}}</small>
| pos2 = left
| bg2 = white
| mark2 = Red pog.svg
| lat2_deg = 47 | lat2_min = 24
| lon2_deg = 08 | lon2_min = 03
| label3 = <small>{{nowrap|[[Chur|11th Mechanized Bde.]]}}</small>
| pos3 = right
| bg3 = white
| mark3 = Red pog.svg
| lat3_deg = 47 | lat3_min = 29
| lon3_deg = 08 | lon3_min = 43
| label6 = <small>{{nowrap|[[Morges|1st Mechanized Bde.]]}}</small>
| pos6 = right
| bg6 = white
| mark6 = Red pog.svg
| lat6_deg = 46 | lat6_min = 31
| lon6_deg = 06 | lon6_min = 30
}}
{{Location map many | Switzerland
| width = 300
| float = right
| caption = Swiss Air Force airbases
|label1=|coordinates1=| label3 = <small>[[Alpnach Air Base|Alpnach]]</small>
| pos3 = right
| bg3 = white
| mark3 = Gfi-set01-airport.png
| mark3size = 12
| lat3_deg = 46 | lat3_min = 56
| lon3_deg = 08 | lon3_min = 16
| label4 = <small>[[Locarno Airport|Locarno]]</small>
| pos4 = right
| bg4 = white
| mark4 = Gfi-set01-airport.png
| mark4size = 12
| lat4_deg = 46 | lat4_min = 10
| lon4_deg = 08 | lon4_min = 48
| label5 = <small>[[Emmen Air Base|Emmen]]</small>
| pos5 = right
| bg5 = white
| mark5 = Gfi-set01-airport.png
| mark5size = 12
| lat5_deg = 47 | lat5_min = 05
| lon5_deg = 08 | lon5_min = 18
| label6 = <small>[[Payerne Air Base|Payerne]]</small>
| pos6 = right
| bg6 = white
| mark6 = Gfi-set01-airport.png
| mark6size = 12
| lat6_deg = 46 | lat6_min = 49
| lon6_deg = 06 | lon6_min = 56
| label7 = <small>[[Meiringen Air Base|Meiringen]]</small>
| pos7 = right
| bg7 = white
| mark7 = Gfi-set01-airport.png
| mark7size = 12
| lat7_deg = 46 | lat7_min = 44
| lon7_deg = 08 | lon7_min = 11
}}


[[File:Schweizer Armee Füs Gr.jpg|thumb|Infantry squad and Mowag Piranha during presentation]]
Higher staff officers:
[[File:Pz 87 Leopard - Front 2 - Schweizer Armee - Steel Parade 2006.jpg|thumb|[[Leopard 2A4|Leopard 87]] main battle tanks]]
* OF-6 Brigadier (Br) / brigadier / brigadiere
[[File:Mowag Eagle Aufkl Fz 93.jpg|thumb|[[Mowag Eagle]] Swiss army reconnaissance vehicle]]
* OF-7 Divisionär (Div) / divisionnaire / divisionario
* OF-8 Korpskommandant (KKdt) / commandant de corps / comandante di corpo
* OF-9 General / général / generale (There are technically no Generals. In time of war, the Parliament will elect a General)


==High Command==
== Army ==
Under the "[[Armee 61]]" structure, the Army was organised into [[Field Army Corps 1]], [[Field Army Corps 2|2]], and 4, and Mountain Army Corps 3. This structure was superseded by the "[[Armee 95]]" structure and thereafter the "[[Armee XXI]]" structure.
[[Image:Henri guisan.jpg|thumb|General [[Henri Guisan]], commander-in-Chief of the swiss army during World War II.]]
In peacetime, the armed forces are led by the Chief of the Armed Forces (''Chef der Armee''), who reports to the head of the Department of Defence and to the [[Swiss Federal Council|Federal Council]] as a whole. The current Chief of the Armed Forces is ''Korpskommandant'' [[Christophe Keckeis]].


Since the Army XXI reform in 2004, the basic structure of the Army has been reorganised in the following units: infantry [[brigade]]s (2 and 5); [[mountain infantry]] brigades (9 and 12); [[Armoured warfare|armoured]] brigades (1 and 11). Additionally two large reserve brigades (Infantry Brigade 7 and Mountain Brigade 10) exist. Four territorial divisions link the Army with the cantons by co-ordinating territorial tasks inside their sector and are immediately responsible for the security of their regions, depending only on the decisions of the [[Swiss Federal Council|Federal Council]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Grandes unités |url=http://www.he.admin.ch/internet/heer/fr/home/verbaende.html |language=fr |publisher=Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports |access-date=12 July 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090502102055/http://www.he.admin.ch/internet/heer/fr/home/verbaende.html |archive-date=2 May 2009 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
In times of crisis or war, the [[Federal Assembly of Switzerland|Federal Assembly]] elects a ''General'' ([[Comparative military ranks|OF-9]]) as [[Commander-in-Chief]] of the Armed Forces (''Oberbefehlshaber der Armee''). There have been four Generals in Swiss history:


== Air Force ==
*[[Henri Dufour]] (1847-1848, [[Sonderbund|Sonderbung war]]; and 1856-57, [[Neuchâtel Crisis]])
{{Main|Swiss Air Force|History of the Swiss Air Force}}
*[[Hans Herzog]] (1871-1872, [[Franco-Prussian War]])
[[File:Axalp Cougar Opening flare launch.jpg|thumb|Cougar Helicopter firing decoy flares]]
*[[Ulrich Wille]] (1914-1918, [[World War I]])
[[File:Axalp FA-18C 5.jpg|thumb|F/A-18C flying over the Swiss Alps]]
*[[Henri Guisan]] (1939-1945, [[World War II]])


The [[Swiss Air Force]] has been traditionally a militia-based service, including its pilots, with an inventory of approximately 456 aircraft whose lengthy service lives (many for more than 30 years) overlapped several eras. However, beginning with its separation from the Army in 1996, the Air Force has been downsizing; it now has a strength of approximately 270 fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft, and is moving towards a smaller, more professional force.
Officers which would have the title of general in other armies do not bear the title general (OF-8: ''Commandant de corps'', OF-7 ''Divisionnaire'' and OF-6 ''Brigadier''), as this title is strictly a wartime designation. The distinctive feature of their rank insignia are traditionally stylized [[edelweiss]] ([[:de:Bild:GradabzeichenSchweizerArmee-HSO.png|image]]). However, when Swiss Officers are involved in peacekeeping missions abroad, they often receive temporary ranks that do not exist in the Swiss Army, to put them on an equal footing with foreign officers. For example, the
head of the Swiss delegation at the NNSC in [[Korea]] (see below) had a rank of '''major general'''.


The primary front-line air-defence fleet consists of 30 [[F/A-18 Hornet]]s (34 aircraft were originally purchased, with three F/A-18D and one F/A-18C lost in crashes) organized into three [[Squadron (aviation)|squadrons]] (11, 17 and 18) along with 53 [[Northrop F-5|F-5 Tiger II]]s (98 F-5E and 12 F-5F originally purchased). In October 2008, the Swiss Hornet fleet reached the 50,000 flight hours milestone.<ref>{{cite web |title=Swiss Hornets reach 50,000 flight hours milestone |url=http://www.milaviapress.com/news/archive/2008.php#48 |date=24 October 2008 |publisher=Military Aviation Publications |access-date=14 July 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081019024440/http://www.milaviapress.com/news/archive/2008.php#48 |archive-date=19 October 2008 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
==Structure==
[[Image:Swiss Army.png|thumb|left|800px|Structure of the Swiss Army XXI]]
<br clear="all">


In 2017, the Swiss Hornet fleet reached the 100,000 flight hours milestone as well as 20 years of flight operations.
==Intelligence community==


Previously, the [[Swiss Air]] Force did not maintain 24/7 operational readiness status in peacetime, owing to the limited budget and staff available. The Swiss Air Force worked on extending the operational times in 2016, aiming to be maintaining readiness for two armed jet fighters round-the-clock by 2020.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.admin.ch/gov/de/start/dokumentation/medienmitteilungen.msg-id-59711.html |title=Umsetzung des Projekts Luftpolizeidienst 24 steht bevor |trans-title=Implementation of Project Air Policing 24 is Imminent |language=de |website=www.admin.ch |publisher=[[Swiss Federal Council]] |date=1 December 2015 |access-date=19 July 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160816160042/https://www.admin.ch/gov/de/start/dokumentation/medienmitteilungen.msg-id-59711.html |archive-date=16 August 2016 |url-status=live}}</ref> On 31 December 2020, the Swiss Air Force gained two operational fighter jets ready to scramble 24/7.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Service de police aérienne 24 h sur 24 |url=https://www.admin.ch/gov/fr/accueil/documentation/communiques.msg-id-81760.html |access-date=2024-01-19 |website=www.admin.ch}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title=Swiss Air Force finally on call around the clock | website=SWI swissinfo.ch | date=30 December 2020 | url=https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/politics/swiss-air-force-finally-on-call-around-the-clock/46253116 | access-date=5 February 2024}}</ref>
The Swiss military department maintains the [[Onyx (interception system)|Onyx]] [[List of intelligence gathering disciplines|intelligence gathering]] system, similar in concept to the [[UKUSA]]'s [[ECHELON]] system, but at a much smaller scale.


The difficulty of defending Swiss airspace is illustrated by the [[Swiss Alps|mountainous]] character and the small size of the country; the maximum extension of Switzerland is 348&nbsp;km, a distance that can be flown in a little over 20 minutes by commercial aircraft. Furthermore, Switzerland's policy of neutrality means that they are unlikely to be deployed elsewhere (except for training exercises).
The Onyx system was launched in 2000 in order to monitor both civil and military communications, such as [[telephone]], [[fax]] or [[Internet]] traffic, carried by [[satellite]]. It was completed in late 2005 and currently consists in three interception sites, all based in Switzerland. In a way similar to ECHELON, Onyx uses lists of keywords to filter the intercepted content for information of interest.


== Intelligence gathering ==
On [[8 January]] [[2006]], the Swiss newspaper [[Sonntagsblick]] (Sunday edition of the [[Blick]] newspaper) published a secret report produced by the Swiss government using data intercepted by Onyx. The report described a [[fax]] sent by the [[Egypt]]ian department of Foreign Affairs to the Egyptian [[Embassy]] in [[London]], and described the existence of secret detention facilities ([[black sites]]) run by the [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]] in [[Central Europe|Central]] and [[Eastern Europe]]. The Swiss government did not officially confirm the existence of the report, but started a judiciary procedure for leakage of secret documents against the newspaper on [[9 January]] 2006.
{{See also|Swiss intelligence agencies}}
[[File:Picswiss VS-69-41.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Onyx (interception system)|Onyx]] antennas in [[Leuk]]]]
The Swiss military department maintains the [[Onyx (interception system)|Onyx]] [[List of intelligence gathering disciplines|intelligence gathering]] system, similar to but much smaller than the international [[Echelon (signals intelligence)|Echelon]] system.


The Onyx system was launched in 2000 in order to monitor both civil and military communications, such as [[telephone]], [[fax]] or [[Internet]] traffic carried by [[satellite]]. It was completed in late 2005 and currently consists of three interception sites, all based in Switzerland. In a way similar to Echelon, Onyx uses lists of keywords to filter the intercepted content for information of interest.
==Peacekeeping missions==


On 8 January 2006 the Swiss newspaper ''[[Sonntagsblick]]'' (Sunday edition of the ''[[Blick]]'' newspaper) published a secret report produced by the Swiss government using data intercepted by Onyx.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Carey |first=Henry Frank |date=1 August 2013 |title=The Domestic Politics of Protecting Human Rights in Counter-Terrorism: Poland's, Lithuania's, and Romania's Secret Detention Centers and Other East European Collaboration in Extraordinary Rendition |url=https://doi.org/10.1177/0888325413480176 |journal=East European Politics and Societies |language=en |volume=27|issue=3 |pages=429–465 |doi=10.1177/0888325413480176 |s2cid=147436044 |issn=0888-3254}}</ref> The report described a [[fax]] sent by the [[Egypt]]ian department of Foreign Affairs to the Egyptian [[Embassy]] in [[London]], and described the existence of secret detention facilities ([[black sites]]) run by the [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]] in [[Central Europe|Central]] and [[Eastern Europe]]. The Swiss government did not officially confirm the existence of the report, but started a judiciary procedure for leakage of secret documents against the newspaper on 9 January 2006.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Investigations against SonntagsBlick|url=http://www.blick.ch/news/ausland/folterfluege/artikel30493 |date=1 October 2006 |access-date=21 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060111070821/http://www.blick.ch/news/ausland/folterfluege/artikel30493 |archive-date=11 January 2006|url-status=dead}}</ref>
Switzerland being a [[neutral country]], its army does not take part in armed conflicts in other countries. However, over the years, the Swiss army has been part of several peacekeeping missions around the world.


== Lakes flotilla ==
=== Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina (SHQSU) ===
{{Redirect|Swiss Navy|the Swiss Merchant Navy|Merchant Marine of Switzerland}}
The maritime branch of the Army maintains a [[flotilla]] of military [[patrol boat]]s to secure several sizeable lakes that span Switzerland's borders. These boats also serve in a [[search and rescue]] role.


During the Second World War Switzerland fielded the [[Type 41 class patrol boat|Type 41 class]] of patrol boats, armed with the 24&nbsp;mm Type 41 [[anti-tank rifle]]—not a personal weapon at {{convert|74|kg|lb|abbr=on}},<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sadefensejournal.com/wp/the-swiss-armys-first-mass-anti-tank-rifle-the-tankbuchse-tb-41-24mm/|title=The Swiss Army's First Mass Anti-Tank Rifle The Tankbüchse (Tb) 41 24mm|website=Small Arms Defense Journal|date=17 September 2019|author=Tom Murphy|access-date=28 February 2022|archive-date=28 February 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220228213929/http://www.sadefensejournal.com/wp/the-swiss-armys-first-mass-anti-tank-rifle-the-tankbuchse-tb-41-24mm/|url-status=dead}}</ref> and later replaced by a 20mm auto-cannon—and machine guns. Nine units were commissioned between 1941 and 1944. These boats were upgraded in 1964, notably receiving radars, radios and modern armament, and were kept in service into the 1980s, the last being decommissioned in late 1983.<ref>Information note of ''Spiez'' at the [[Swiss Museum of Transport]]</ref>
From 1996 to 2001, The Swiss Army was present in Bosnia and Herzegovina with headquarters in Sarajevo. Its mission, part of the Swiss Peacekeeping Missions, was to provide logistic and medical support to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, [[OSCE]] as well as protection duties and humanitarian demining. The mission was named SHQSU standing for Swiss Headquarters Support Unit to BiH. It was composed of 50 to 55 elite Swiss soldiers under contract for 6 to 12 months. None of the active soldiers were armed during the duration of the mission. The Swiss soldiers were recognized among the other armies present on the field by their distinctive yellow beret. The SHQSU is not the same as the more publicized SWISSCOY, which is the Swiss Army Mission to Kosovo.


The force utilises later the ''Aquarius''-class (''Patrouillenboot'' 80) riverine [[patrol boat]]s, which are operated by Motorboat Company 10 of the Corps of Engineers and which patrol lakes [[Lake Geneva|Geneva]], [[Lake Lucerne|Lucerne]], [[Lake Lugano|Lugano]], [[Lake Maggiore|Maggiore]] and [[Lake Constance|Constance]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Lehrverband Genie/Rettung – Truppen |url=http://www.he.admin.ch/internet/heer/de/home/heer/unsere_organisation/lvbgenie/Truppen.html |publisher=Swiss Land Forces |access-date=19 July 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090501222449/http://www.he.admin.ch/internet/heer/de/home/heer/unsere_organisation/lvbgenie/Truppen.html |archive-date=1 May 2009 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
=== Mission in Korea (NNSC) ===


In June 2019 Finnish shipbuilder [[Marine Alutech]] delivered the first four of 14 ''Patrouillenboot'' 16, the ''Patrouillenboot'' 80's successor, to the flotilla and these boats's manufacturer designation as Watercat 1250 Patrol;<ref>{{cite web |title=Swiss Navy tauft ihre neuen Kriegsschiffe |url=https://www.20min.ch/schweiz/tessin/story/Swiss-Navy-tauft-ihre-neuen-Kriegsschiffe-25383737 |date=17 June 2019 |language=de |publisher=20 Minuten |access-date=3 January 2019 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200118155129/https://www.20min.ch/schweiz/zentralschweiz/story/Schweizer-Armee-tauft-ihre-neuen-Kriegsschiffe-25383737 |archive-date=18 January 2020}}</ref> all ships of this class will be named for [[astronomical object]]s.<gallery>
Switzerland is part of the [[Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission]] (NNSC) which was created to monitor the armistice between [[North Korea|North]] and [[South Korea]]. Since the responsibilities of the NNSC have been much reduced over the past few years, only 5 people are still part of the
File:Spiez-IMG 8698.JPG|The ''Spiez'', a [[Type 41 class patrol boat|Type 41]] patrol boat, on display at the [[Swiss Museum of Transport]]
Swiss delegation, located near the [[Korean DMZ]].
File:Patrouillenboot 80 - Schweizer Armee - Steel Parade 2006.jpg|''Aquarius''-class patrol boat, [[Type 80 class patrol boat|Type 80]]
File:16 M+1041 Pollux Lago Maggiore 190622.jpg|''Patrouillenboot 16''-class patrol boat.
</gallery>


==Roles==
References:
The prime role of the Swiss Armed Forces is homeland defence. Switzerland is not part of any multinational war-fighting structure, but selected armed forces members and units do take part in international missions.
*[http://www.vbs-ddps.ch/internet/groupgst/en/home/peace/peace/laufende/korea.html Swiss participation to the mission NNSC in Korea]
*[http://www.swissinfo.org/eng/search/detail/Swiss_keep_watch_over_fragile_peace.html?siteSect=881&sid=1891533&cKey=1053346440000 Swiss keep watch over fragile peace], on [[Swissinfo]]
*[http://www.swiss-maeder.ch/photo4.htm Photographs by a member of the Swiss delegation]


===Military and civil defence===
== Criticism ==
There is an organised movement in Switzerland ([[Group for a Switzerland without an Army]]) aiming at the abolition of the military. The Swiss have voted twice on such a referendum. The first time was in 1989, when 64.4% of the voters voted in favour of maintaining the Swiss Army. The second vote was in 1999, with 76.8% in favour.


After World War II, Switzerland began building homes with 40&nbsp;cm-thick concrete ceilings that might survive [[firebombing]] of the type that destroyed [[Bombing of Hamburg in World War II|Hamburg]] and [[Bombing of Dresden in World War II|Dresden]]. In the 1960s they began constructing [[fallout shelter|radiation and blast shelters]] that could survive one to three [[bar (unit)|bar]]s (100–300&nbsp;kPa) of pressure from a nuclear explosion.<ref name="mcphee19831107">{{cite news | url=http://archives.newyorker.com/?i=1983-11-07#folio=054 | title=La Place de la Concorde Suisse-II | magazine=The New Yorker | date=7 November 1983 | access-date=22 July 2013 | author=McPhee, John | pages=55 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131109094217/http://archives.newyorker.com/?i=1983-11-07#folio=054 | archive-date=9 November 2013 | url-status=live}}</ref> Building codes require blast shelters, which are said to be able to accommodate 114% of the Swiss population.<ref>{{cite web |title=Bunkers for all |url=http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/swiss_news/Bunkers_for_all.html?siteSect=201&sid=10906783&rss=true&ty=st |date=3 July 2009 |publisher=[[swissinfo]] |access-date=13 July 2009}}{{Dead link|date=December 2021 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes}}</ref> Small towns have large underground parking garages that can serve as sealed community shelters.{{r|mcphee19831107}} There are also hospitals and command centres in such shelters, aimed at keeping the country running in case of emergencies. Every family or rental agency has to pay a replacement tax to support these shelters, or alternatively own a personal shelter in their place of residence;<ref>Imogen Foulkes. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/6347519.stm Swiss still braced for nuclear war] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070213071207/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/6347519.stm |date=13 February 2007}}. BBC News, 10 February 2007.</ref> many private shelters serve as [[wine cellar]]s and closets.{{r|mcphee19831107}}
In 1992, after the Swiss government decided to buy [[FA-18]] jets, they collected about half a million signatures within one month for a referendum. The population decided to buy the jets, with 57.1% voting to approve the project.


[[File:Turmkanone-1-fuchsegg.jpg|thumb|Camouflaged cannons and fortifications near [[Furka Pass]] in the Gotthard region]]
The organisation is still active in antimilitaristic work and also in the anti-war movement.
Thousands of tunnels, highways, railroads, and bridges are built with [[tank trap]]s and primed with [[demolition]] [[Explosive material|charges]] to be used against invading forces; often, the civilian engineer who designed the bridge plans the demolition as a military officer. Hidden guns are aimed to prevent enemy forces from attempting to rebuild.{{r|mcphee19831031}} Permanent fortifications were established in the [[Swiss Alps|Alps]], as bases from which to retake the fertile valleys after a potential invasion. They include underground air bases that are adjacent to normal runways; the aircraft, crew and supporting material are housed in the caverns.


However, a significant part of these fortifications was dismantled between the 1980s and during the "Army 95" reformation. The most important fortifications are located at [[Fortress Saint-Maurice|Saint-Maurice]], [[St. Gotthard Pass|Gotthard Pass]] area and [[Sargans]]. The fortification on the west side of the [[Rhône]] at Saint-Maurice has not been used by the army since the beginning of the 1990s. The east side (Savatan) is still in use.
Generally, the army being criticized today by politicians who argue it is trying to save its existence by performing non-military jobs like protecting embassies or providing security services to the [[World Economic Forum]] (WEF) in [[Davos]]. This practice is seen to be justified by conservatives when regarding the lack of police forces (Switzerland leases police troops from Germany for the duration of the WEF).


During the Cold War the military expected that any invasion would likely come from the northeast, as the Soviet Union associated the country with NATO despite its stated neutrality.{{r|mcphee19831031}} The Swiss government thought that the aim of an invasion would be to control the economically important transport routes through the [[Swiss Alps]], namely the [[St. Gotthard Pass|Gotthard]], the [[Simplon Pass|Simplon]] and [[Great St. Bernard]] passes, because Switzerland does not possess any significant natural resources.
Other criticism targets the planned acquisition of more fighter-jets, in sight of the coming retirement of [[Northrop F-5|F-5]] Tiger IIs in 2011, and a [[CASA CN-235]] transport aircraft, for example for evacuation purposes.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} Army critics say that F/A-18 are not needed, and that for humanitarian duties cargo space can be leased for much less money on civilian aircraft.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}


===Peacekeeping overseas===
==Conscription==
[[File:Cougar AS532 T 334 Swiss Air Force Rescue Exercise.jpg|thumb|Cougar AS532 T-334 during a Swiss Air Force rescue exercise]]
All able-bodied male Swiss citizens are [[conscription|conscripted]] to the armed forces until the age of 30. In practice, persons who become Swiss citizens after the age of 25 are rarely summoned and instead pay a 3% additional annual [[income tax]]. For women the service is voluntary.


Operating from a [[neutral country]], Switzerland's Armed Forces do not take part in armed conflicts in other countries. However, over the years, the Swiss Armed Forces have been part of several peacekeeping missions around the world.
During military service, the employee is paid a compensation of 80% of his regular salary by the state. Most employers, however, continue to pay the full salary during military service. In this case, the compensation is paid to the employer. Employers cannot fire a person in service by law, although there is no specific provision preventing a conscript from being fired before or after a period of service, other than the catch-all law against [[wrongful termination]].


From 1996 to 2001, the Swiss Armed Forces were present in [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]] with headquarters in [[Sarajevo]]. Their mission, as part of the Swiss Peacekeeping Missions, was to provide logistic and medical support to the [[Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe]] (OSCE), protection duties and humanitarian demining. The mission was named SHQSU, standing for Swiss Headquarters Support Unit to BiH. It was composed of 50 to 55 elite Swiss soldiers under contract for six to 12 months. None of the active soldiers were armed during the duration of the mission. The Swiss soldiers were recognised among the other armies present on the field by their distinctive yellow beret. The SHQSU is not the same as the more publicized [[Swisscoy]], which is the Swiss Army Mission to Kosovo.
===Information letter and marching orders===
At 16 years of age, male Swiss citizens receive a letter detailing their military obligations. At 18 years of age, they are sent marching order to present themselves to a nearby [[barracks]] for a day of information. They are given presentations explaining the various branches of service and prerequisites for certain positions such as jet pilot (which requires two years of [[flight school]] outside of military service). Those wishing to take part in [[Swiss Civilian Service|civilian service]] are instructed to address a letter detailing their intentions to their canton's military authority prior to recruitment.


In its first military deployment since 1815, Switzerland deployed 31 soldiers to Afghanistan in 2003, and two Swiss officers had worked with German troops. Swiss forces were withdrawn in February 2008.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/switzerland-ends-military-mission-in-afghanistan/6457084 | title=Switzerland ends military mission in Afghanistan | date=23 February 2008 }}</ref>
Conscripts are also issued a service booklet in which the person's attendances or exemptions are recorded. To avoid conflicting with studies or work, they are also asked to pick a time (typically corresponding to spring, summer and winter periods) most convenient for recruitment and start of service. Typically, a conscript will attend recruitment at 19 years of age and begin service at 20, but may legally postpone recruitment until 23 years of age.


Switzerland is part of the [[Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission]] (NNSC), which was created to monitor the armistice between [[North Korea|North]] and [[South Korea]]. Since the responsibilities of the NNSC have been much reduced over the past few years, only five people are still part of the Swiss delegation, which is located near the [[Korean DMZ]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/en/home/themen/einsaetze/peace/korea.html|title=Swiss participation to the mission NNSC in Korea|publisher=Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160604050802/http://www.vtg.admin.ch/internet/vtg/en/home/themen/einsaetze/peace/korea.html|archive-date=4 June 2016|url-status=dead|access-date=12 July 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/search/detail/Swiss_keep_watch_over_fragile_peace.html?siteSect=881&sid=1891533&cKey=1053346440000|title=Swiss keep watch over fragile peace|date=19 May 2003|publisher=swissinfo|access-date=12 July 2009}}{{Dead link|date=December 2021 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://swissthomas.ch/nnsc-korea-1980-81/ |title=Photogallery: NNSC Korea|publisher=Photogallery Thomas Mäder|access-date=12 July 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090402233514/http://www.swiss-maeder.ch/photo4.htm |archive-date=2 April 2009|url-status=live}}</ref>
Due to a new military reform enacted in [[2005]], it is no longer possible to postpone the initial training to finish [[university]], although it is possible to postpone in order to finish high school or equivalent internships (for example for an aspiring carpenter who might only finish training at 19 or 20). For this reason many people try to get out of military service, so they can attend university immediately after finishing high school. It is possible to split the time in basic training (as recruit) and service (as soldier) which would allow one to start university immediately, the second half must be served at the earliest possible opportunity, usually Christmas break, a time which is usually used to study for exams. Hence, this practice is very hard on the student, and generally not recommended. The successive training weeks can also be postponed, but there is limited scope. In general, men interrupt their work during these weeks.


===Recruitment===
==Equipment==
{{main|List of equipment of the Swiss Armed Forces}}
Recruitment is a two to three day process, typically taking place three to six months before start of service, during which the conscript is given physical and psychological tests to assess his suitability for service. Conscripts are also given the opportunity to present [[medical certificate]]s from private doctors detailing any physical or mental handicaps they may have. [[Conscientious objector]]s also meet with additional psychologists to explain their desire to abstain from regular army service and take part in civilian service instead.


==Logos==
A person may either be found fully capable, in which case army service or civilian service follow, less than capable, in which case civilian protection follows, or incapable, in which case the person is exempted from service and pays a 3% additional annual [[income tax]]. A person's starting function is also determined or narrowed down during recruitment.
<gallery>
Logo of Swiss Armed Forces.svg|Old logo<!--until?-->
Armee CH logo.svg|Quadrilingual logo until 2023
Swiss army logo 2023 DFIR.svg|Quadrilingual logo since 2023
Swiss army logo 2023 claim de.svg|German-language logo since 2023
Swiss army logo 2023 claim fr.svg|French-language logo since 2023
Swiss army logo 2023 claim it.svg|Italian-language logo since 2023
</gallery>


===Army service===
==See also==
*[[Military ranks of the Swiss Armed Forces]]
60% of conscripted men will carry out regular military service, as opposed to civilian service, civilian protection or service exclusion. Service duration is 260 days for enlisted soldiers, 500 for [[non-commissioned officer]]s and 600 for officers.
*[[Swiss Guard]]
*[[National Redoubt (Switzerland)]]
*[[Militia System]]
*[[Civil protection in Switzerland]]


== References==
[[Image:Cartouches-Fass90-p1000785.jpg|thumb|Ready ammunition of the Swiss Army. Every soldier equipped with the [[Sig 550]] assault rifle is issued 50 rounds of ammunition in a sealed box, to be opened only upon alert. The ammunition is then loaded into the [[Magazine (firearm)|rifle magazine]] for use by the militiaman should any needs arise while he is en route to join his unit. Any other use than this, or even unsealing is strictly forbidden.]]
{{Reflist}}
Famously, members of the armed forces keep their rifles and uniforms in their homes for immediate mobilisation, as well as 50 rounds of ammunition in a sealed tin, to be used for self defence while traveling to the mobilisation points. Additional ammunition is kept at military bases where the militia are supposed to report. Swiss [[military doctrine]]s are arranged in ways that make this organisation very effective and rapid. [[Switzerland]] claims to be able to mobilise the entire population for warfare within 12 hours. In contrast, it can take several weeks to several months for a militarily-active country such as the United States to mobilise its military force.

====Boot camp====
[[Boot camp]] lasts a minimum of 18 to 21 weeks, during which the initial four weeks are the same ''general basic instructions''. Following the initial four weeks:
*A soldier will have 6 weeks of ''function-specific basic instructions'' and 5 to 8 weeks of ''practical service''.
*A corporal will have 3 weeks of ''function-specific basic instructions'', 6 weeks of ''rank-specific instructions with practical training'' and 5 to 8 weeks of '';practical service''.
*A sergeant will have 3 weeks of ''function-specific basic instructions'', 19 weeks of ''rank-specific instructions with practical training'' and 6 to 9 weeks of ''practical service''.
*A sergeant-major will have 3 weeks of ''function-specific basic instructions'', 20 weeks of ''rank-specific instructions with practical training'' and 6 to 9 weeks of ''practical service''.
*A lieutenant will have 3 weeks of ''function-specific basic instructions'', 34 weeks of ''rank-specific instructions with practical training'' and 6 to 9 weeks of ''practical service''.

Certain units, regardless of rank, are subject to further variations in training length. Grenadiers are an elite infantry unit with a 25-week boot camp. The AAD/DRA ([[German language|German]], ''Armeeaufklärungsdetachement''; [[French language|French]], ''détachement de reconnaissance''; [[English language|English]], ''[[reconnaissance]] [[Detachment (military)|detachment]]'') Switzerland's new [[Special Air Service|SAS]]-type Special Forces unit, which is an all-volunteer professional unit with a rigorous selection process, has 18 months of training following boot camp.

====Ongoing service====
Following boot camp, a conscript serves for three weeks a year, or more if their service would not be completed by 30 years of age at such a rate.

====Ongoing shooting practice====
Until 30 years of age, conscripts are required to present themselves with their rifle at a [[shooting range]] for [[target practice]]. This can be done during most periods of the year and dates and locations (which include certain privately-owned ranges) can be consulted on local billboards. During practice, a box of 50 bullets are shot at a standardized target; if the points amount over 50, this is recorded in the conscript's service booklet, otherwise, additional bullets must be purchased at cost. If the conscript still does not manage to achieve 50 points, he may be required to serve an additional two weeks of complementary training.

====Long service====
Conscripts so inclined may request to serve their obligatory days in a one-time stint, thereby being freed from ongoing service in following years and only being required to take part in ongoing shooting practice. A maximum 15% of conscripts in any given recruitment session may take part in long service. Soldiers taking part in the long service program serve for 300 days instead of 260 as in regular army service, but are granted one four-day weekend a month. Non-commissioned officers and officers serve 500 and 600 days as usual.

====Weaponless service====
Those who do not wish to carry a weapon may apply for weaponless service. This is done by writing a motivation letter to one's canton of residence prior to recruitment, and is further discussed during. Many exercises can be completed without a weapon, but some require one for practical purposes, in which case a wooden replacement is used.

===Civilian protection===
Conscripts found to be sufficiently unfit for regular military service, but not for exclusion, take part in civilian protection, where they may be called on to assist the [[police]], [[fire department|fire]] or [[health department]]s, as well as [[natural disaster]] relief and [[crowd control]] during demonstrations or events with large attendances. On average, a person will undergo two weeks of initial training, followed by two days of service a year.

===Civilian service===
Since [[1996]], Swiss citizens can apply for [[Swiss Civilian Service|civilian service]]. Entry to the civilian service is based on moral grounds and subject to a successful application.

Conscripts who are found to be sufficiently fit for regular military service, but who object to service for reasons of conscience, can take part in civilian service. This consists of various kinds of social services, such as reconstructing [[cultural site]]s, helping the elderly and other activities removed from military connotations. Civilian service lasts 390 days, one and a half times longer than a soldier's regular army service.

==Shelters and fortifications==
{{Cleanup-section|date=May 2006}}
[[Image:Fallout shelter switzerland.jpg|thumb|Swiss fallout shelter used by Swiss army during a repetition course (shelter of [[Vernayaz]])]]
Swiss building codes require [[fallout shelter|radiation and blast shelters]] to protect against bombing. There is a bed for 95% of Swiss residents in one of the many shelters. There are also hospitals and command centres in such shelters, aimed at keeping the country running in case of emergencies. Every family or rental agency has to pay a small replacement tax to support these shelters, or alternatively own a personal shelter in their place of residence.

Moreover, tunnels and key bridges are built with [[tank trap]]s. Tunnels are also primed with [[demolition]] [[Explosive material|charges]] to be used against invading forces. Permanent fortifications are established in the [[Alps]], as bases from which to retake the fertile valleys after a potential invasion. They include underground air bases which are adjacent to normal runways; the aircraft, crew and supporting material are housed in the caverns. The concept of underground fortifications in the Alps stems from the so-called "[[Reduit]]" concept of the World War II. It was intended that if the [[Axis Powers]] were to invade Switzerland, they would have to do so at a huge price. The army would barricade itself in the mountains within the fortresses, which would be very difficult to take. However, a significant part of these fortifications have been dismantled between the 1980's and during the "Army 95" reformation. The most important fortifications are located at [[Saint-Maurice, Switzerland|Saint-Maurice]], [[Gotthard Pass]] area and [[Sargans]]. The fortification on the left side of the [[Rhône]] at Saint-Maurice is no longer used by the army since the beginning of the 1990's. The right side (Savatan) is nonetheless still in use.

The Swiss government thought that the aim of an invasion of Switzerland would be to control the economically important transport routes through the Swiss Alps, namely the [[Gotthard]], the [[Simplon Pass|Simplon]] and [[Great St. Bernard]] passes, because Switzerland does not possess any significant natural resources. Those who actually served in the Swiss Army during the war never criticised this concept - even if it openly meant that the enemy could take the civilian population in the plains hostage.

==Leadership==
In contrast to most other comparable Armies, officer candidates are not necessarily career regulars. Instead, until 2004 officers were traditionally selected from the pool of NCOs (non-commissioned officers) and then underwent OCS (officer candidate school, which was and is open to both militia - i.e. officers who also have a civilian job - and future professional officers), five months of intensive training that emphasised small-unit and platoon-sized unit tactics. This system ensured that all officers knew the trade skills of a non-commissioned soldier and mitigated resentment towards officers from NCOs.

This was abolished with the Army XXI reform as a concession to the Swiss economy which was increasingly unhappy about having its future leaders away for two years at a time (the time it took to become an officer until 2004). In the new system, officers-to-be are selected early based on criteria such as leadership potential and education and are sent directly to officer training. This system, which is similar to that employed in most countries of the world, reduces the time needed to train an officer but means that new entries are sometimes seen to lack credibility in the eyes of traditionalists. The new system is under review but remains in force.

To assure a generally high level of military leadership above the rank of first lieutenant, the Army maintains the HKA (''Hoehere Kaderschule der Armee'') which is responsible for an array of professionally run schools such as BUSA (''Berufsunteroffiziersschule der Armee'') which runs a program for professional non-commissioned officers, the MILAK (''Militaerakademie'') which runs a bachelor degree program for professional officers, programs for company and battalion commanders, a number of staff courses, and the General Staff and Command College (Gst S), an elite training program whose graduates leave their former branches and are inducted into the so-called General Staff Corps.

Future general staff officers are selected from the best company commanders and undergo battalion commander training before starting general staff training. Only 30 new trainees are selected per year and even fewer complete the demanding training. Being a general staff officer is a prerequisite for a range of important jobs on Brigade and higher level, such as G2 (chief of intelligence) or G3 (chief of operations).

The ratio of professional versus militia officers is about 1:1. As a rule of thumb, a significant number of senior civil servants and business leaders in Switzerland are general staff officers, and aspiring managers used to be required to become officers by their company, which would give them personnel management skills amongst other things.

== Weapon systems ==
To reduce training and logistics costs, the Swiss military standardises on a few carefully selected types of [[weapon]]s. For example, Switzerland uses only one rifle model (except for select forces, such as military police, grenadiers etc., who are also trained in the use of [[Heckler & Koch MP5]]s, shotguns etc.), the [[SIG 550|FASS 90]], and three types of ground-based [[anti-aircraft]] systems, including a Swiss-built and improved version of the [[FIM-92 Stinger|Stinger]] ([[Swiss army knife|Swiss army knives]] are also issued, although they are not considered weapons). In 1993, the Swiss government ordered 34 [[F/A-18 Hornet|FA-18]] fighter jets from the [[United States|United States of America]], which were subsequently re-built in Switzerland, notably for the electronics. Also, the software supporting the pilot was improved and then sold to the [[United States|United States of America]]. Switzerland traditionally depends on itself for supplies and parts, often using non-standard equipment, although this has changed somewhat.

=== Small arms ===
[[Image:Caroline-face-trépied-p1000508.jpg|thumb|The Swiss [[SIG 550]] also known as the Fass 90 or Stgw 90. The SIG 550 is also used by the [[Chilean Army]] and some US federal agencies.]]
* [[SIG 550]] / [[Sturmgewehr 90]] assault rifle
* [[SIG 510]] / [[Sturmgewehr 57]] battle rifle (previous rifle, rare but still in service)
* [[SIG P220]] semi-automatic pistol
* [[MG3]] machine gun
* [[Brugger & Thomet MP5]] submachinegun
* [[FN Minimi]] light-machine gun
* [[HG 85]] handgrenade
* [[Gewehraufsatz 97]] 40mm grenade launcher
* [[Remington 870]] multipurpose shotgun 91 (known as ''Mehrzweckgewehr 91'')
* [[Panzerfaust 3]] anti-tank rocket
* [[M47 Dragon]] anti-tank guided rocket
* [[FIM-92 Stinger]] shoulder-fired anti-air missile
* [[TRG-42|Sako TRG-42]] 8.6 mm anti-personnel sniper rifle
* [[PGM Hecate II]] 12.7 mm anti-materiel heavy sniper rifle (Gew06)

* [[MG 710 machine gun]] / MG55 (still stocked, but neither trained on nor used in rep courses actually the same as MG3)

=== Armoured vehicles ===
* Pz87 LEO WE / variant of [[Leopard 2]] main battle tank
* SPz2000 / [[CV9030]] infantry fighting vehicle
* PzHbz88/95 KAWEST / variant of [[M109 howitzer]] self-propelled armoured artillery
* RadSPz Piranha / [[Mowag Piranha]] armoured troop transport
* [[MOWAG Eagle]] armoured patrol vehicle

=== Aircraft ===
[[Image:Schweizer F-18 C-3.jpg|thumb|A Swiss [[F/A-18]] landing in [[Payerne]]]].
* [[Northrop F-5|F-5 Tiger II]]
* [[F/A-18 Hornet|F/A-18 C/D]]
* [[Pilatus PC-6]]
* [[Pilatus PC-7]]
* [[Pilatus PC-9]]
* [[Eurocopter Super Puma]]
* [[Alouette III]]

==See also==
*[[Swiss Civilian Service]]
*[[Gun politics in Switzerland]]
*[[Swiss Army knife]]
*[[IMESS]], the [[Swiss]] Future Soldier program.


==References==
==Bibliography==
* [[John McPhee]], ''La Place de la Concorde Suisse'', New York: Noonday Press (Farrar, Straus & Giroux), 1984.
* Imogen Foulkes. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/6347519.stm Swiss still braced for nuclear war]. BBC News, [[10 February]] [[2007]].
*Field Army Corps 1, ''Sécurité au seuil du XXIe siècle: Histoire et vie du Corps d'Armee de Campagne 1'', c.2000. {{ISBN|2-9700264-0-6}}.
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20060516084706/https://www.hka.vbs.admin.ch/internet/hka/de/home/berufsunteroffiziersschule/downloads/sprachen.Par.0007.DownloadFile.tmp/04MV.pdf MILVOC], German-English Dictionary of military terms from the Swiss Armed Forces


==External links==
==External links==
{{commonscat|Military of Switzerland}}
{{Wikisource1911Enc|Switzerland/Army}}
{{Commons category|Military of Switzerland}}
*[http://www.vbs.admin.ch/internet/vbs/en/home.html Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports]&mdash;Official site
* [https://www.vtg.admin.ch/ vtg.admin.ch—Swiss Armed Forces{{snd}}Official website] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191029235924/https://www.vtg.admin.ch/ |date=29 October 2019}}
*[http://www.gsoa.ch/gsoa/en/ Group for a Switzerland without an Army]
* [https://www.armee.ch/ armee.ch—Swiss Armed Forces{{snd}}Official website]
*[http://www.objectbook.com/militaervelo Official Swiss Army Bike - Militaervelo site]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20050810011805/http://www.stephenhalbrook.com/switzerland.html Articles, books and media by Stephen P. Halbrook]
*[http://www.kamouflage.net/camouflage/00162/en_index.php Swiss camouflage patterns] (kamouflage.net)
* Clip 15 Minutes with the Swiss Armed Forces [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bBDFt8nivc&list=UUgHPYFGpKDl9alTTm3N6kCg&index=6]
*[http://www.stephenhalbrook.com/switzerland.html Articles, books and media by Stephen P. Halbrook]
* [https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=NFvaOeZUIHo Virginia International Tattoo: Swiss Army Central Band]
*http://www.constitution.org/mil/swiss_report.htm Patton, George S., et al., THE SWISS REPORT: A special study for [[Western Goals Foundation]] a private intelligence dissemination network active on the right-wing in the United States.
<!--spacing-->
*{{de icon}} [http://www.1861.ch/ Living history group representing the federal army of 1861]


{{Switzerland topics}}
{{Europe topic|Military of|Militaries of Europe}}
{{Military of Switzerland}}
{{Military of Europe}}
{{Armies in Europe}}
{{Authority control}}


{{Portal bar|Switzerland}}
[[Category:Wikipedia articles needing style editing]]
[[Category:Military of Switzerland|*]]
[[Category:Conscript militaries|Switzerland]]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Swiss Armed Forces}}
[[bn:সুইজারল্যান্ডের সামরিক বাহিনী]]
[[Category:Military of Switzerland| ]]
[[de:Schweizer Armee]]
[[Category:Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sports]]
[[fr:Armée suisse]]
[[it:Esercito svizzero]]
[[hu:Svájc hadereje]]
[[nl:Zwitsers leger]]

Latest revision as of 22:04, 3 January 2025

Swiss Armed Forces
Service branches
Websitewww.vtg.admin.ch
www.armee.ch
Leadership
Commander-in-chiefFlag of the General Vacant in peacetime
Minister of DefenceViola Amherd
Chief of the Armed ForcesFlag of the Chief of the Armed Forces Lt Gen Thomas Süssli
Personnel
Military age19 years of age for male compulsory military service; 18 years of age for voluntary male and female military service;
Conscription19–34 years of age (males only)
40 for subaltern officers, 50 for staff officers and higher
Available for
military service
969,000[1] males, age 18–49,
930,000[1] females, age 18–49
Reaching military
age annually
27,000[1] males,
23,000[1] females
Active personnel147,178[2]
Expenditure
BudgetCHF 5.5 billion (~US$6.25 billion, 2024) [2]
Percent of GDP0.68% (2018)[3]
Industry
Domestic suppliers
Related articles
RanksMilitary ranks of Switzerland

The Swiss Armed Forces (German: Schweizer Armee; French: Armée suisse; Italian: Esercito svizzero; Romansh: Armada svizra; lit.'Swiss Army') are the military and security force of Switzerland, consisting of land and air service branches. Under the country's militia system, regular soldiers constitute a small part of the military and the rest are conscripts or volunteers aged 19 to 34 (in some cases up to 50). Because of Switzerland's long history of neutrality, the Swiss Armed Forces have not been involved in foreign wars since the early 19th century, but do participate in international peacekeeping missions. Switzerland is part of the NATO Partnership for Peace programme.[4]

The regulations of the Swiss militia system stipulate that the soldiers keep their own personal equipment, including all personally assigned weapons, at home or in an armoury; until 2007 this also included ammunition.[5] Compulsory military service applies to all male Swiss citizens, with women serving voluntarily. Males usually receive initial orders at the age of 18 for military conscription eligibility screening. About two-thirds of young Swiss men are found suitable for service, while alternative service exists for those found unsuitable.[6] Annually, approximately 20,000 persons undergo basic training for 18 weeks (23 weeks for special forces).

In 2003, the reform "Army XXI" replaced the previous model "Army 95" and was adopted by popular vote, reducing manpower from 400,000 to about 200,000 personnel, with 120,000 receiving periodic military training and 80,000 reservists who have completed their total military training requirements.[7] A further reform effective in 2018 heralded the reduction of forces to 100,000 members.

History

[edit]
The Battle of Sempach, 1386
Swiss soldiers with war pigeons during World War I

The land component of the Swiss Armed Forces originated from the cantonal troops of the Old Swiss Confederacy, called upon in cases of external threats by the Tagsatzung or by the canton in distress. In the federal treaty of 1815, the Tagsatzung prescribed cantonal troops to put a contingent of 2% of the population of each canton at the federation's disposition, amounting to a force of some 33,000 men. The cantonal armies were converted into the federal army (Bundesheer) with the constitution of 1848. From this time, it was illegal for the individual cantons to declare war or to sign capitulations or peace agreements. Paragraph 13 explicitly prohibited the federation from sustaining a standing army, and the cantons were allowed a maximum standing force of 300 each (not including the Landjäger corps, a kind of police force). Paragraph 18 declared the "obligation" of every Swiss citizen to serve in the federal army if conscripted (Wehrpflicht), setting its size at 3% of the population plus a reserve of one and one half that number, amounting to a total force of some 80,000.

A Swiss Army exercise in 1896, as depicted by Joseph Clemens Kaufmann

The first complete mobilization, under the command of Hans Herzog, was triggered by the Franco-Prussian War in 1871. In 1875, the army was called in to crush a strike of workers at the Gotthard tunnel. Four workers were killed and 13 were severely wounded.

Paragraph 19 of the revised constitution of 1874 extended the definition of the federal army to every able-bodied male citizen, which would have swollen the size of the army, had it not been replaced by later revisions, from under 150,000 to more than 700,000, with population growth during the 20th century rising further to some 1.5 million,[citation needed] the second largest armed force per capita[how?] after the Israel Defense Forces.[citation needed]

Military badge belonging to Julien Wyler, 1929, in the collection of the Jewish Museum of Switzerland

Prior to the revised constitution, Jews in Switzerland were excluded from the army, with various exceptions and special conditions through the years. In 1808, the laws of mandatory military service were particularly strict for Jews, who, unlike Christians, could not opt to be replaced by a volunteer. During this time, Jews were not considered to be Swiss citizens. Following the introduction of Jewish corporations in 1813, they were given separate documentation for military enlistment. A special rule in 1816 demanded that the Jews should pay an equipment contribution of 1000 francs per year (400 francs in 1808). From 1852 onwards, Jews served in the army like other Swiss citizens, and the constitution of 1874 removed all remaining discriminatory measures.[8][9]

A major manoeuvre commanded in 1912 by Ulrich Wille, a reputed Germanophile, convinced visiting European heads of state, in particular Kaiser Wilhelm II, of the efficacy and determination of Swiss defences.[10] Wille was subsequently put in command of the second complete mobilization in 1914, and Switzerland escaped invasion in the course of World War I. Wille also ordered the suppression of the 1918 general strike (Landesstreik) with military force. Three workers were killed, and a rather larger number of soldiers died of the Spanish flu during mobilization. In 1932, the army was called to suppress an anti-fascist demonstration in Geneva. The troops shot dead 13 demonstrators, wounding another 65. This incident long damaged the army's reputation, leading to persistent calls for its abolition among left-wing politicians. In both the 1918 and the 1932 incidents, the troops deployed were consciously selected from rural regions such as the Berner Oberland, fanning the enmity between the traditionally conservative rural population and the urban working class. The third complete mobilization of the army took place during World War II under the command of Henri Guisan (see also Switzerland during the World Wars). The Patrouille des Glaciers race, created to test the abilities of soldiers, was created during the war.

Veterans' dragoons squadron in 2006, presenting the uniform of 1972

In the 1960s and 1970s, the armed forces were organised according to the "Armee 61" structure. Horse mounted cavalry (specifically dragoons) were retained for combat roles until 1973, and were the last non-ceremonial horse cavalry in Europe, as were bicycle infantry battalions until 2001.[11]

Since 1989, there have been several attempts to curb military activity or even abolish the armed forces altogether. A notable referendum on the subject was held on 26 November 1989 and, although defeated, did see a significant percentage of the voters in favour of such an initiative.[12] However, a similar referendum, called for before, but held shortly after the 11 September attacks in 2001 in the US, was defeated by over 77% of voters.[13]

In 1989, the status of the army as a national icon was shaken by a popular initiative aiming at its complete dissolution (see: Group for a Switzerland without an Army) receiving 35.6% support. This triggered a series of reforms and, in 1995, the number of troops was reduced to 400,000 ("Armee 95"). Article 58.1 of the 1999 constitution repeats that the army is "in principle" organized as a militia, implicitly allowing a small number of professional soldiers. A second initiative aimed at the army's dissolution in late 2001 received a mere 21.9% support.[13] Nevertheless, the army was shrunk again in 2004, to 220,000 men ("Armee XXI"), including the reserves.

In 2016, the Swiss Federal Assembly voted to further reduce the army from 140,000 men to 100,000 men, reducing the time of basic training from 21 weeks to 18, but also to increase the military budget by 2.4 billion Swiss francs.[14] In 2022, the Assembly voted to increase spending by 1.4 billion Swiss francs by 2030, or at least 1% of the country's GDP.[15] The government planned to spend up to 50 billion Swiss francs on defense through the early 2030s.[16] In 2024, the Armed Forces was projected to face significant funding shortfalls.[17]

Personnel

[edit]

As of 1 March 2017, the Swiss Armed Forces consist of 120,496 people on active duty (in Switzerland called Angehöriger der Armee, shortly AdA, engl.: Member of the Armed Forces), of which 9,163 are professionals, with the rest being conscripts or volunteers.[18] Women, for whom military service is voluntary, numbered 929: less than 1% of the total, with over 25% thereof being officers.[18] The numbers had increased by 2021. Once in service, women have the same rights and duties as their male colleagues, and they can join all services, including combat units. Recruits in multi-lingual Switzerland are usually instructed in their native language, except that the small number of Romansh-speaking recruits are instructed in German.

In contrast to most other comparable armed forces, officers are generally not career regulars. Under the most recent army reform, all soldiers complete a full recruit school of 18 weeks.[19] During the initial 18-week training period, recruits may volunteer for consideration to continue with NCO training.[19] After the completion of NCO training, individuals are promoted to sergeant and integrated into platoons at recruit schools as squad leaders (Gruppenchefs, Chefs de Groupe, Capogruppi). Squad leaders support their platoon commanders for the 18-week duration of the recruit school, with the exception of those who volunteer for officer school—they leave after 7 weeks of service as squad leaders—while those who volunteer for higher NCO school leave after 12 weeks of service as squad leaders. Officer candidates complete a 15-week course to prepare them for their role as platoon leaders (Zugführer, Chef de section, Caposezione), which traditionally culminates in a march covering 100 kilometres (62 mi) in 24 hours. After promotion to lieutenant, platoon leaders return to their recruit schools, where they take charge of a recruit school platoon for 18 weeks.[19]

There were about 15,000 officers and 29,000 NCOs in the Swiss Armed Forces in 2021.[18] Those of higher rank serve for longer each year; a private may serve 365 days over 30 years, while a high-ranking officer may serve 2,000 days before retiring. Each promotion requires more time, which is known as "paying your rank". This describes the mechanism of a soldier fulfilling their rank's minimal service time after being promoted into said rank. Companies subsidize military training by continuing to pay their employees, who list their ranks and responsibilities on their résumés.[20]

In January 2023, the Swiss Armed Forces began integrating Muslim and Jewish chaplains into the service. The army's chaplaincy had only been open to Catholics and Protestants until then. New insignia have been created for military jackets: the Islamic crescent for Muslims and the Tablets of Stone for Jews.[21]

Conscription

[edit]

Switzerland has mandatory military service for all able-bodied male citizens, who are conscripted when they reach the age of majority,[22] though women may volunteer for any position.[23] Since 1996, conscripts who are found to be sufficiently fit for regular military service, but who object for reasons of conscience, can apply for civilian service. This service consists of various kinds of social services, such as reconstructing cultural sites, helping the elderly and other activities removed from military connotations. Civilian service lasts 340 days, 50% longer than a soldier's regular army service.[24]

People determined unfit for service, where fitness is defined as "satisfying physical, intellectual and psychological requirements for military service or civil protection service and being capable of accomplishing these services without harming oneself or others",[25] are exempted from service, but pay 11 installments of a 3% additional annual income tax until the age of 37 unless they are affected by a disability.[26] Conscripts found to be sufficiently unfit for regular military service, but not for exemption, take part in civil protection, where they may be called on to assist the police, fire or health departments, as well as natural disaster relief and crowd control during demonstrations or events with large attendance.[27]

Almost 20% of all conscripts were found unfit for military or civilian service in 2008; the rate is generally higher in urban cantons such as Zurich and Geneva than in rural ones.[28] Swiss citizens living abroad are generally exempted from conscription in peacetime.[29] Dual citizenship does not grant exemption.[30]

On 22 September 2013, a referendum was held that aimed to abolish conscription in Switzerland.[31] With a turnout of 47% on this particular question, over 73% voted against eliminating conscription.

Structure since 2018

[edit]
Thomas Süssli, chief of the Swiss Armed Forces since 2020
Structure of the Swiss Army, 2018 (click to enlarge)

In peacetime, the Swiss Armed Forces are led by the Chief of the Armed Forces (Chef der Armee), who reports to the head of the Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport and to the Swiss Federal Council as a whole. The current Chief of the Armed Forces is Lieutenant-General (Korpskommandant) Thomas Süssli. Lt-Gen Süssli replaced Lieutenant-General (Korpskommandant) Philippe Rebord on 1 January 2020.

  • Chief of the Armed Forces, in Bern[32]
    • Joint Operations Command, in Bern[33]
    • Training and Education Command, in Bern
    • Armed Forces Command Support Organisation, in Bern
    • Armed Forces Logistics Organisation, in Bern
    • Armed Forces Staff, in Bern

In times of crisis or war, the Federal Assembly elects a full General (OF-9) as Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces (Oberbefehlshaber der Armee). The rank is distinct and particular, as it is associated exclusively with wartime fighting or a national crisis due to war among Switzerland's neighbouring countries.[20]

Infantry squad and Mowag Piranha during presentation
Leopard 87 main battle tanks
Mowag Eagle Swiss army reconnaissance vehicle

Army

[edit]

Under the "Armee 61" structure, the Army was organised into Field Army Corps 1, 2, and 4, and Mountain Army Corps 3. This structure was superseded by the "Armee 95" structure and thereafter the "Armee XXI" structure.

Since the Army XXI reform in 2004, the basic structure of the Army has been reorganised in the following units: infantry brigades (2 and 5); mountain infantry brigades (9 and 12); armoured brigades (1 and 11). Additionally two large reserve brigades (Infantry Brigade 7 and Mountain Brigade 10) exist. Four territorial divisions link the Army with the cantons by co-ordinating territorial tasks inside their sector and are immediately responsible for the security of their regions, depending only on the decisions of the Federal Council.[35]

Air Force

[edit]
Cougar Helicopter firing decoy flares
F/A-18C flying over the Swiss Alps

The Swiss Air Force has been traditionally a militia-based service, including its pilots, with an inventory of approximately 456 aircraft whose lengthy service lives (many for more than 30 years) overlapped several eras. However, beginning with its separation from the Army in 1996, the Air Force has been downsizing; it now has a strength of approximately 270 fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft, and is moving towards a smaller, more professional force.

The primary front-line air-defence fleet consists of 30 F/A-18 Hornets (34 aircraft were originally purchased, with three F/A-18D and one F/A-18C lost in crashes) organized into three squadrons (11, 17 and 18) along with 53 F-5 Tiger IIs (98 F-5E and 12 F-5F originally purchased). In October 2008, the Swiss Hornet fleet reached the 50,000 flight hours milestone.[36]

In 2017, the Swiss Hornet fleet reached the 100,000 flight hours milestone as well as 20 years of flight operations.

Previously, the Swiss Air Force did not maintain 24/7 operational readiness status in peacetime, owing to the limited budget and staff available. The Swiss Air Force worked on extending the operational times in 2016, aiming to be maintaining readiness for two armed jet fighters round-the-clock by 2020.[37] On 31 December 2020, the Swiss Air Force gained two operational fighter jets ready to scramble 24/7.[38][39]

The difficulty of defending Swiss airspace is illustrated by the mountainous character and the small size of the country; the maximum extension of Switzerland is 348 km, a distance that can be flown in a little over 20 minutes by commercial aircraft. Furthermore, Switzerland's policy of neutrality means that they are unlikely to be deployed elsewhere (except for training exercises).

Intelligence gathering

[edit]
Onyx antennas in Leuk

The Swiss military department maintains the Onyx intelligence gathering system, similar to but much smaller than the international Echelon system.

The Onyx system was launched in 2000 in order to monitor both civil and military communications, such as telephone, fax or Internet traffic carried by satellite. It was completed in late 2005 and currently consists of three interception sites, all based in Switzerland. In a way similar to Echelon, Onyx uses lists of keywords to filter the intercepted content for information of interest.

On 8 January 2006 the Swiss newspaper Sonntagsblick (Sunday edition of the Blick newspaper) published a secret report produced by the Swiss government using data intercepted by Onyx.[40] The report described a fax sent by the Egyptian department of Foreign Affairs to the Egyptian Embassy in London, and described the existence of secret detention facilities (black sites) run by the CIA in Central and Eastern Europe. The Swiss government did not officially confirm the existence of the report, but started a judiciary procedure for leakage of secret documents against the newspaper on 9 January 2006.[41]

Lakes flotilla

[edit]

The maritime branch of the Army maintains a flotilla of military patrol boats to secure several sizeable lakes that span Switzerland's borders. These boats also serve in a search and rescue role.

During the Second World War Switzerland fielded the Type 41 class of patrol boats, armed with the 24 mm Type 41 anti-tank rifle—not a personal weapon at 74 kg (163 lb),[42] and later replaced by a 20mm auto-cannon—and machine guns. Nine units were commissioned between 1941 and 1944. These boats were upgraded in 1964, notably receiving radars, radios and modern armament, and were kept in service into the 1980s, the last being decommissioned in late 1983.[43]

The force utilises later the Aquarius-class (Patrouillenboot 80) riverine patrol boats, which are operated by Motorboat Company 10 of the Corps of Engineers and which patrol lakes Geneva, Lucerne, Lugano, Maggiore and Constance.[44]

In June 2019 Finnish shipbuilder Marine Alutech delivered the first four of 14 Patrouillenboot 16, the Patrouillenboot 80's successor, to the flotilla and these boats's manufacturer designation as Watercat 1250 Patrol;[45] all ships of this class will be named for astronomical objects.

Roles

[edit]

The prime role of the Swiss Armed Forces is homeland defence. Switzerland is not part of any multinational war-fighting structure, but selected armed forces members and units do take part in international missions.

Military and civil defence

[edit]

After World War II, Switzerland began building homes with 40 cm-thick concrete ceilings that might survive firebombing of the type that destroyed Hamburg and Dresden. In the 1960s they began constructing radiation and blast shelters that could survive one to three bars (100–300 kPa) of pressure from a nuclear explosion.[46] Building codes require blast shelters, which are said to be able to accommodate 114% of the Swiss population.[47] Small towns have large underground parking garages that can serve as sealed community shelters.[46] There are also hospitals and command centres in such shelters, aimed at keeping the country running in case of emergencies. Every family or rental agency has to pay a replacement tax to support these shelters, or alternatively own a personal shelter in their place of residence;[48] many private shelters serve as wine cellars and closets.[46]

Camouflaged cannons and fortifications near Furka Pass in the Gotthard region

Thousands of tunnels, highways, railroads, and bridges are built with tank traps and primed with demolition charges to be used against invading forces; often, the civilian engineer who designed the bridge plans the demolition as a military officer. Hidden guns are aimed to prevent enemy forces from attempting to rebuild.[20] Permanent fortifications were established in the Alps, as bases from which to retake the fertile valleys after a potential invasion. They include underground air bases that are adjacent to normal runways; the aircraft, crew and supporting material are housed in the caverns.

However, a significant part of these fortifications was dismantled between the 1980s and during the "Army 95" reformation. The most important fortifications are located at Saint-Maurice, Gotthard Pass area and Sargans. The fortification on the west side of the Rhône at Saint-Maurice has not been used by the army since the beginning of the 1990s. The east side (Savatan) is still in use.

During the Cold War the military expected that any invasion would likely come from the northeast, as the Soviet Union associated the country with NATO despite its stated neutrality.[20] The Swiss government thought that the aim of an invasion would be to control the economically important transport routes through the Swiss Alps, namely the Gotthard, the Simplon and Great St. Bernard passes, because Switzerland does not possess any significant natural resources.

Peacekeeping overseas

[edit]
Cougar AS532 T-334 during a Swiss Air Force rescue exercise

Operating from a neutral country, Switzerland's Armed Forces do not take part in armed conflicts in other countries. However, over the years, the Swiss Armed Forces have been part of several peacekeeping missions around the world.

From 1996 to 2001, the Swiss Armed Forces were present in Bosnia and Herzegovina with headquarters in Sarajevo. Their mission, as part of the Swiss Peacekeeping Missions, was to provide logistic and medical support to the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), protection duties and humanitarian demining. The mission was named SHQSU, standing for Swiss Headquarters Support Unit to BiH. It was composed of 50 to 55 elite Swiss soldiers under contract for six to 12 months. None of the active soldiers were armed during the duration of the mission. The Swiss soldiers were recognised among the other armies present on the field by their distinctive yellow beret. The SHQSU is not the same as the more publicized Swisscoy, which is the Swiss Army Mission to Kosovo.

In its first military deployment since 1815, Switzerland deployed 31 soldiers to Afghanistan in 2003, and two Swiss officers had worked with German troops. Swiss forces were withdrawn in February 2008.[49]

Switzerland is part of the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission (NNSC), which was created to monitor the armistice between North and South Korea. Since the responsibilities of the NNSC have been much reduced over the past few years, only five people are still part of the Swiss delegation, which is located near the Korean DMZ.[50][51][52]

Equipment

[edit]

Logos

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d [1] Archived 19 December 2023 at the Wayback Machine "Office fédéral de la statistique" (in French). Retrieved 19 December 2023.
  2. ^ a b [2] Archived 20 January 2024 at the Wayback Machine "Eidgenössiches Departement für Verteidigung, Bevölkerungsschutz und Sport" (in German). Retrieved 27 February 2024.
  3. ^ The World Factbook – Switzerland Central Intelligence Agency, Retrieved 23 May 2020
  4. ^ Frontières entre police et armée Archived 18 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Cahier du GIPRI, n° 2, 2004
  5. ^ SwissInfo Soldiers can keep guns at home but not ammo Archived 2 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Swissinfo
  6. ^ "Zwei Drittel der Rekruten diensttauglich". NZZ (in German). 11 March 2008. Retrieved 23 February 2009.
  7. ^ Armeezahlen www.vbs.admin.ch Archived 9 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine (German)
  8. ^ Weldler-Steinberg, Augusta (1966). Geschichte der Juden in der Schweiz: Vom 16. Jahrhundert bis nach der Emanzipation (in German). Schweizerischer Israelitischer Gemeindebund. pp. 166–168.
  9. ^ Battegay, Caspar; Lubrichy, Naomi (2018). Jewish Switzerland: 50 Objects Tell Their Stories (in English and German). Basel: Christoph Merian. p. 146. ISBN 978-3-85616-847-6.
  10. ^ World War I–Preparation in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  11. ^ Doole, Claire (11 May 2001). "End of road for Swiss army cyclists". BBC News. Archived from the original on 31 August 2017. Retrieved 5 February 2008.
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Bibliography

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  • John McPhee, La Place de la Concorde Suisse, New York: Noonday Press (Farrar, Straus & Giroux), 1984.
  • Field Army Corps 1, Sécurité au seuil du XXIe siècle: Histoire et vie du Corps d'Armee de Campagne 1, c.2000. ISBN 2-9700264-0-6.
  • MILVOC, German-English Dictionary of military terms from the Swiss Armed Forces
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