Defence Staff (Sweden)
The Defence Staff (Swedish: Försvarsstaben, abbreviated Fst) was a Swedish government agency established in 1937 and was active until 1994. Initially the tasks of the Defence Staff was limited to the overall military strategic and operational issues as well as to the central operational command of army forces. In 1961 a central operational command was added for the navy and air force.[1] The Defence Staff was in 1994 merged with the Swedish Armed Forces Headquarters.
History
The Defence Staff was established on 1 July 1937 (SFS 1937:667) with the task of planning the use of the national defense funds and for the military branches perform the joint war preparations and to promote coherence and synergy between military branches. The Defence Staff was organized in 10 departments, army operational, navy operational, air force operational, military signals, cryptography, air defense, communications, intelligence, war history and photo department. In 1942 the first major reorganization took place. The Defence Staff became the Supreme Commander's (ÖB) staff, organized in three sections, as well as an naval and an aviation department (later to section 1). Section 1 comprised six departments: army, quartermaster, air defense, communications, signaling, service and photo department. Section 2 comprised three departments: Foreign affairs, interior affairs and war history department and section 3 two departments: the press and film as well as the staff welfare department.[2]
Next thorough reorganization of the Defence Staff occurred in 1961. An operation management (OPL 1 for studies, OPL 2 for war planning and OPL 3 for preparedness and exercises), four sections, one administrative and information department and a staff welfare bureau was formed. Section 1 comprised four departments, public, communication, military signals and quartermaster department, section 2 three departments: attaché, intelligence and interior department, section 3 two departments: the press and film and war history department, section 4 budget detail and two departments, research - and the planning department. An EDP office in section 1 was established in 1965 (later the EDP department). In 1968 the Total Defense Signal Security Department (Totalförsvarets signalskyddsavdelning) was added (formely the National Signal Security Commission (Statens signalskyddsnämnd)).[2]
The Defence Staff was again reorganized in 1980 with an operating department, six operational sections, a planning department with the four planning sections, an administrative section and an information department. The agency, known as The Supreme Commander (Överbefälhavaren), according to instructions (SFS 1983:276), is exercising the leadership of the nations military defense and related operational activities. The Defence Staff that since 1 July 1981 was named Överbefälhavaren, was in connection with the Swedish Armed Forces restructuring on 1 July 1994 merged with the Swedish Armed Forces Headquarters (Högkvarteret, HKV).[2]
Chiefs of the Defence Staff
Rank and name | Branch | Period | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Major General Olof Thörnell | Army | 1936–1939 | Acting until 1937, Supreme Commander 1939-1944 |
Major General Axel Rappe | Army | 1939–1941 | |
Colonel Samuel Lars Åkerhielm | Army | 1941–1942 | Acting |
Major General Axel Bredberg | Army | 1942–1945 | |
Major General Carl August Ehrensvärd | Army | 1945–1947 | |
Major General Nils Swedlund | Army | 1947–1951 | Supreme Commander 1951–1961 |
Major General Richard Åkerman | Army | 1951–1957 | |
Major General Curt Göransson | Army | 1957–1961 | |
Major General Carl Eric Almgren | Army | 1961–1967 | |
Lieutenant General Stig Synnergren | Army | 1967–1970 | Supreme Commander 1970–1978 |
Lieutenant General Bo Westin | Navy | 1970–1972 | |
Lieutenant General Gunnar Eklund | Navy | 1972–1976 | |
Lieutenant General Lennart Ljung | Army | 1976–1978 | Supreme Commander 1978–1986 |
Vice Admiral Bengt Schuback | Navy | 1978–1982 | |
Vice Admiral Bror Stefenson | Navy | 1982–1987 | |
Lieutenant General Torsten Engberg | Navy | 1987–1991 | |
Lieutenant General Owe Wiktorin | Air Force | 1991–1992 | Supreme Commander 1994–2000 |
Vice Admiral Peter Nordbeck | Navy | 1992–1994 |
References
- ↑ Försvarets traditioner i framtiden med översiktlig historik från 1500-talet (PDF) (in Swedish). Statens försvarshistoriska museer TradN. 2015. p. 14. ISBN 9789197859554. LIBRIS 17552963. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
- 1 2 3 "Försvarsstaben (1937 – 1994)" [The Defence Staff (1937 – 1994)] (in Swedish). National Archives of Sweden. Retrieved 22 March 2016.