Swedish navy hunts for mystery submarine
October 21, 2014  01:22
The Swedish navy stepped up its hunt today for a suspected foreign submarine in its waters with fingers pointing at Moscow in a throwback to the Cold War.

Swedish soldiers and sailors were scouring the sea southeast of the capital Stockholm in the biggest operation of its kind for years, while the public was warned for the first time to keep a distance and airspace restrictions were enforced.

The mystery around the alleged incursion thickened today, with Russia and the Netherlands denying that the vessel was theirs as tensions in Baltic rise over the crisis in Ukraine. 

"There's an increase in military exercises from both the Russian and the NATO side," Prime Minister Stefan Loefven said, speaking at a press conference in Helsinki. 

In one of two airspace violations in September, two Russian SU-24 fighter-bombers allegedly entered Swedish airspace in what Foreign Minister Carl Bildt at the time called "the most serious aerial incursion by the Russians" in almost a decade.

The Baltic Sea, an area of immense strategic importance, saw intense naval manoeuvring throughout the Cold War years, with the Soviet Navy paying particular attention to neutral Sweden's long, rugged coastline. 

In the most widely known incident of that era, a Soviet submarine ran aground in 1981 near the major naval base of Karlskrona, and was only allowed to leave after a lengthy, humiliating wait.

Even after the breakup of the Soviet Union, Sweden has continued to keep a close eye on vessels believed to be foreign submarines.
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