Milo ÖN

Övre Norrlands militärområde
(Milo ÖN)
Active 1942–1993
Country  Sweden
Allegiance Swedish Armed Forces
Type Military area
Role Multi (Sea, Air and Land)
Part of Swedish Armed Forces
Garrison/HQ Boden

Milo ÖN (Swedish: Övre Norrlands militärområde, Upper Norrland Military Area) was a Swedish military area, a command of the Swedish Armed Forces that had operational control over Upper Norrland, for most time of its existence corresponding to the area covered by the counties of Västerbotten and Norrbotten. The headquarters of Milo ÖN were located in Boden.

History

Milo ÖN was created in 1966 along with five other military areas as part of a reorganisation of the administrative divisions of the Swedish Armed Forces. It can be seen as the successor of VI. militärområdet (VI. Military Area) created in 1942, but that did not have the same tasks as Milo ÖN. The military area consisted of the land covered by the above-mentioned counties. In 1993, the number of military areas of Sweden was decreased to three, and as a consequence of that, Milo ÖN was merged with Milo NN to create a new military area, Milo N.

Units 1989

In peacetime the Upper Norrland Military Area consisted of the following units, which were training recruits for wartime units:

In wartime the Upper Norrland Military Area would have activated the following major land units, as well as a host of smaller units:

  • 15th Division, in Boden
    • NB 19 - Norrbotten Brigade, a Type 85 Norrland Brigade (optimized for arctic/winter warfare) based on the I 19/P 5 - Norrbotten Regiment
    • NB 50 - Lapland Brigade, a Type 85 Norrland Brigade based on the I 20 - Västerbotten Regiment
    • 8x Norrland Jäger battalions
    • 3x Self-propelled Artillery Battalions, with 8x Bandkanon 1 each

Commanders

See also

References

  • Holmberg, Björn (1993). Arméns regementen, skolor och staber: en sammanställning. Arvidsjaur: Svenskt militärhistoriskt bibliotek. ISBN 91-972209-0-6.
  • Kjelldorff, Lennart (2001). "Försvarets utveckling från Gustav Wasa till vår tid" (PDF). Försvarets Historiska Telesamlingar. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-22. Retrieved 2007-01-12.

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