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Switzerland to Increase Its Contribution to Bosnia Peace Mission
(MENAFN) Switzerland is set to temporarily expand its military footprint in Bosnia and Herzegovina, with the Federal Council announcing Wednesday a plan to deploy 12 additional armed personnel to the EU's longstanding peace support mission in the conflict-prone region.
The government, meeting in session, approved a dispatch to Parliament that would send a 10-member transport group alongside two staff officers to reinforce the multinational force — timed specifically to coincide with Austria's anticipated command of the mission in 2027.
The one-year deployment carries a price tag of CHF 2.31 million — nearly $3 million — to be drawn from the Defence Ministry's existing budget. It requires parliamentary sign-off under the Armed Forces Act before proceeding.
Bern has maintained a continuous armed presence of 20 personnel within the EU-led mission since November 2004, making this proposed expansion one of the most significant temporary adjustments to that commitment in recent years.
The Federal Council acknowledged that while Bosnia and Herzegovina's security environment has broadly stabilized, conditions on the ground remain precarious. The situation, it warned, is "fragile" amid recurring political crises and ethnic tensions.
Officials stressed that the reinforcement is not merely logistical. The deployment, they said, directly supports broader EU stabilization efforts while advancing Switzerland's own security and foreign policy objectives across the Western Balkans — a region that has long tested European diplomatic resolve.
The government, meeting in session, approved a dispatch to Parliament that would send a 10-member transport group alongside two staff officers to reinforce the multinational force — timed specifically to coincide with Austria's anticipated command of the mission in 2027.
The one-year deployment carries a price tag of CHF 2.31 million — nearly $3 million — to be drawn from the Defence Ministry's existing budget. It requires parliamentary sign-off under the Armed Forces Act before proceeding.
Bern has maintained a continuous armed presence of 20 personnel within the EU-led mission since November 2004, making this proposed expansion one of the most significant temporary adjustments to that commitment in recent years.
The Federal Council acknowledged that while Bosnia and Herzegovina's security environment has broadly stabilized, conditions on the ground remain precarious. The situation, it warned, is "fragile" amid recurring political crises and ethnic tensions.
Officials stressed that the reinforcement is not merely logistical. The deployment, they said, directly supports broader EU stabilization efforts while advancing Switzerland's own security and foreign policy objectives across the Western Balkans — a region that has long tested European diplomatic resolve.
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