Svenske atomvåben vil koste mere end de gavner, hævder ekspert

I en debatartikel i Dagens Nyheter stiller ph.d.-studerende July Decarpentrie ved Försvarshögskolan spørgsmålstegn ved, om Sverige bør investere i egne atomvåben. Hun anerkender militæstrategiske fordele, men hævder, at ulemperne opvejer dem.

I en artikel offentliggjort den 20. februar 2026 i DN Debatt diskuterer July Decarpentrie, ph.d.-studerende ved Försvarshögskolan, Sveriges potentielle investering i egne atomvåben. Hun beskriver de militæstrategiske fordele som klare: atomvåben kan forhindre krig, give politisk fleksibilitet og signalere styrke.  nnPå trods af dette hævder Decarpentrie, at et nærmere blik viser, at ulemperne er større. «Atomvåben gør os ikke sikrere – de gør os mere sårbare», skriver hun. Artiklen understreger, at fordelene ikke opvejer de øgede risici.  n nDebatindlægget rejser spørgsmål om Sveriges sikkerhedspolitik midt i geopolitiske spændinger, men Decarpentrie fokuserer på at veje fordele op mod ulemper uden at foreslå specifikke alternativer.

Relaterede artikler

International law experts debate critically as Swedish PM and deputy PM are shown downplaying attacks on Iran, symbolizing foreign policy shift.
Billede genereret af AI

Experts criticize government for downplaying international law

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

Four international law experts write in DN Debatt that the Swedish government is downplaying international law by dismissing the legality of US and Israeli attacks on Iran as a 'seminariefråga'. They refer to statements by Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson and Deputy Prime Minister Ebba Busch. The experts warn of a departure from Sweden's traditional foreign policy line.

A new report from Pax and Ican shows the number of financial institutions investing in the nuclear weapons industry has risen 15 percent to 301. Stock and fund investments now total over 709 billion dollars. “This is the most dangerous time in my life regarding nuclear weapons,” says ICAN program director Susi Snyder.

Rapporteret af AI

The Swedish government plans to invest 30 billion kronor in transport infrastructure to bolster defense, with a large portion allocated to upgrading the Inlandsbanan railway. This forms part of a broad political agreement to borrow 300 billion kronor for military and civil defense initiatives.

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis