The military of Switzerland, officially known as the Swiss Armed Forces, is a unique institution somewhere between a militia and a regular army. It is equipped with mostly modern, sophisticated, and well-maintained weapons systems and equipment.Fact: date=September 2008
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Swiss Army Librarian :: Brian Herzog
Swiss Army Librarian is a blog by Brian Herzog mostly about library and technology issues ... Swiss Army Librarian. or, The Hitchhiker's Guide to Fear ...www.swissarmylibrarian.net/Swiss Army Pretzel. Your oasis in a sea of sanity...
Swiss Army Pretzel was created out of boredom and expanded for the same reason. ... Note: Please view this blog only on SwissArmyPretzel.com. ...www.swissarmypretzel.com/Swiss Army : Glennz Blog
Swiss Army. I thought about this idea on a rainy sunday morning while I was making a coffee. ( there was a swiss army knife in my kitchen) by lunchtime this was ...blog.glennz.com/swiss-army/Swiss Watch Boutique
Offers Swiss watches at wholesale prices.www.swisswatchboutique.com/Eddie Bauer Swiss Army Knife, 50% off
I feel naked without a pocket knife, and the Swiss Army Knife is my blade of choice. ... WalletPop Blog is a member of the Weblogs, Inc. Network. ...www.walletpop.com/blog/2008/07/04/eddie-bauer-swiss-army-kni...The military of Switzerland, officially known as the Swiss Armed Forces, is a unique institution somewhere between a militia and a regular army. It is equipped with mostly modern, sophisticated, and well-maintained weapons systems and equipment.Fact: date=September 2008
History
main: Military history of Switzerland The Swiss army originated from the cantonal troops of the Old Swiss Confederacy, called upon in cases of external threats by the Tagsatzung or by the canton in distress. In the federal treaty of 1815, the Tagsatzung prescribed cantonal troops to put a contingent of 2% of the population of each canton at the federation's disposition, amounting to a force of some 33,000 men. The cantonal armies were converted into the federal army (Bundesheer) with the constitution of 1848. From this time, it was illegal for the individual cantons to declare war or to sign capitulations or peace agreements. Paragraph 13 explicitly prohibited the federation from sustaining a standing army, and the cantons were allowed a maximum standing force of 300 each (not including the Landjäger corps, a kind of police force). Paragraph 18 declared the obligation of every Swiss citizen to serve in the federal army if conscripted (Wehrpflicht), setting its size at 3% of the population plus a reserve of one and one half that number, amounting to a total force of some 80,000.
The first complete mobilization, under the command of Hans Herzog, was triggered by the Franco-Prussian War in 1871. In 1875, the army was called in to crush a strike of workers at the Gotthard tunnel. Four workers were killed and 13 were severely wounded.
Paragraph 19 of the revised constitution of 1874 extended the definition of the federal army to every able-bodied citizen, swelling the size of the army at least in theory from below 150,000 to more than 700,000, with population growth during the 20th century rising further to some 1.5 million, the second largest armed force per capita after the Israeli Defence Forces.
A major maneuver commanded in 1912 by Ulrich Wille, a reputed germanophile, convinced visiting European heads of state, in particular Kaiser Wilhelm II, of the efficacy and determination of the Swiss defense. Wille subsequently was put in command of the second complete mobilization, and Switzerland escaped invasion in the course of World War I. Wille also ordered the suppression of the general strike (Landesstreik) of 1918 with military force. Three workers were killed, and a rather larger number of soldiers died of the Spanish flu during mobilization. In 1932, the army was called to suppress an anti-fascist demonstration in Geneva. The troops shot 13 unarmed demonstrators, wounding another 65. This incident permanently damaged the army's reputation, leading to persisting calls for its abolition among left wing politicians. In both the 1918 and the 1932 incidents, the troops deployed were consciously selected from rural regions such as the Berner Oberland, fanning the enmity between the traditionally conservative rural population and the urban working class. The third complete mobilization of the army took place during World War II under the command of Henri Guisan (see also Switzerland during the World Wars).






















