ABSTRACT

This book delivers on two analytical levels. First, it is a broad study of Sweden as an international actor, an actor that at least for a brief period tried to play a different international role than that to which it was accustomed. Second, the book problematizes the role of international military missions as drivers for change in the security and defence field. Several perspectives and levels of analysis are covered, from the macro level of strategic discourse to the micro level of the experiences of individual commanders. The book focuses upon Sweden and its participation in the international military mission in Afghanistan during 2002-2012 and also contributes to the growing literature evaluating the mission in Afghanistan, the security practice which has dominated the security and defence discourse of Western Europe for the last decade.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|12 pages

Conceptual framework

chapter 3|24 pages

Swedish strategy and the Afghan experience

From neutrality to ambiguity

chapter 4|23 pages

Swedish use of force and the international legal framework

The legacy of Afghanistan

chapter 5|22 pages

MOTs, Juliette and omelettes

Temporary tactical adaptations as the postmodern, interoperable force awaits the anticipated operation?

chapter 7|22 pages

Leadership lessons

New challenges for smaller nations in multinational, highly stressful missions

chapter 8|22 pages

Introducing gender perspectives in operations

Afghanistan as a catalyst 1

chapter 9|22 pages

A veteran at last

The Afghan experience and Swedish veterans policy

chapter 10|14 pages

Conclusions