The Swiss government is reorienting its armed forces to focus more strongly on defense capabilities, particularly against hybrid threats. As part of this strategic shift, Switzerland will also station a new defence attaché in Warsaw, Poland, from mid-2027 to improve early threat assessment in northeastern Europe.

"The armed forces need to be reoriented. This is to ensure that, in future, they can once again act as a force ready for deployment to protect the population and the country."
Switzerland is no longer watching from the sidelines as European security fractures. In a decisive move, the Federal Council has announced a radical reorientation of the Swiss Armed Forces, shifting the nation's military DNA back toward core defense capabilities. This is not a mere policy tweak; it is a fundamental overhaul designed to confront a world where hybrid threats and remote attacks are the new normal. Defence Minister Martin Pfister delivered a blunt assessment in Bern, asserting that the military must once again become a 'force ready for deployment' to safeguard the population. As Russia’s war of aggression continues to destabilize the continent, Bern is discarding the complacency of the post-Cold War era. The neutral Alpine stronghold is hardening its stance, recognizing that neutrality requires teeth to remain credible in an increasingly volatile geopolitical landscape.
A staggering shift in Swiss diplomatic strategy will see a new defense attaché stationed in Warsaw by mid-2027. This move places Swiss 'military-diplomatic intelligence' directly on the front lines of northeastern Europe, a region currently grappling with intense hybrid pressure from Russia and Belarus. For years, Poland and the Baltic states were monitored remotely from Berlin or Stockholm; that era is over. By establishing a permanent presence in the Polish capital, Switzerland aims to achieve earlier risk detection and a more sophisticated assessment of threats before they reach the Rhine. This strategic outpost will serve as a critical sensor in a region plagued by propaganda, economic sabotage, and border provocations. The government is clear: to protect the Swiss plateau, we must understand the tremors in the East today, not tomorrow.
Money follows the threat, and the numbers are eye-opening. Switzerland will channel a massive 80% of its defense investment toward countering the most likely modern threats—hybrid warfare, cyber-attacks, and air defense—by 2039. This leaves just 20% of the budget for conventional, full-scale military invasion scenarios. This '80-20' split represents a cold, calculated bet on the nature of future conflict. While the tanks of the past remain in the 20% bracket, the real war is already being fought in the electromagnetic spectrum and the skies. Air defense and the protection of military personnel are the new priorities. This financial pivot ensures that Swiss taxpayers are funding a 21st-century shield rather than a 20th-century relic. It is a pragmatic acknowledgment that while a full-scale ground invasion remains a possibility, the daily reality is one of digital disruption and remote strikes.
The battlefield of 2028 will look vastly different as Switzerland activates its first-ever dedicated drone battalion. This unit will serve as the vanguard for a systematic integration of unmanned systems across all branches of service. But the modernization isn't just about hardware; it's about the hands on the wheel. The Army is set to slash the number of senior staff officers in a move to streamline command. In the future, all ground operations will be spearheaded by operational divisions, cutting through the bureaucratic fog that often slows military response. This 'lean and mean' approach aims to transform the Swiss Armed Forces into a more agile, responsive entity. By 2039, the goal is a force that is technologically superior and organizationally efficient. Switzerland is sending a clear message to the world: we are modernizing, we are watching, and we are ready.