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Official Name
Swiss Confederation Geography
Area: 41,285 sq. km. (15,941 sq. mi.); about the size of Vermont
and New Hampshire combined. Cities: Capital--Bern (population
about 123,000). Other cities--Zurich (341,000), Geneva (176,000),
Basel (165,000), Lausanne (116,000). Terrain: 60% mountains, the
remainder hills and plateau. Switzerland straddles the central
ranges of t he Alps.
Climate
Temperate, varying with altitude and season.
Health
Infant mortality rate--4.8/1,000. Life expectancy--men 76.5 yrs.,
women 82.5 yrs. Work force (3.96 million): Agriculture and forestry--4.2%.
Industry and business--25.6%. Services and government--70.2%.
Government Type: Federal state.
Independence
The first Swiss Confederation was founded in August 1291 as a
defensive alliance among three cantons. The Swiss Confederation
established independence from the Holy Roman Empire in 1499. Constitution:
1848; extensively amended in 1874; fully revised in 2000 Branches:
Executive--Federal Council, a collegium of seven members, headed
by a rotating one-year presidency. Legislative--Federal Assembly
(bicameral: Council of States, 46 members; National Council, 200
members). Judicial--Federal Tribunal. Administrative subdivisions:
26 cantons (states) with considerable autonomy. Political parties:
Swiss People's Party (SVP), Social Democratic Party (SP), Free
Democratic Party (FDP), Christian Democratic Party (CVP), and
several smaller parties representing localities or views from
extreme left to extreme right.
Suffrage
In federal matters, universal over 18. Economy GDP (2004)
$369.6 billion (456.5 billion Swiss francs). Annual growth rate
(2005): 2.8% in real terms. Per capita income (2001): $30,522 (37,695
Swiss francs). Average inflation rate (2005): 1.1%. Natural
resources
Water power, timber, salt. Agriculture (est. 1.8% of GDP in 2004):
Products--dairy, livestock, grains, fruit and vegetables, potatoes,
wine. Arable land (1999): 26%.
Industry
(est. 28.2% of GDP in 2004) Types--machinery, chemicals, pharmaceuticals,
time pieces, precision instruments, textiles and clothing, pigment,
transportation equipment. Services (70% of GDP in 2005). Trade
(2002): Exports--$148.6. billion (183.5 billion Swiss francs):
machinery and electronics; chemicals and pharmaceuticals; instruments
and timepieces. Major markets--Germany, United States, France,
Italy, U.K., Japan. Imports--$135 billion (166.7 billion Swiss
francs): machinery and electronics; chemicals; vehicles. Major
suppliers--Germany, Italy, France, Netherlands, U.S., U.K., Japan.
People
Population (2002): 7.46 million. Annual growth rate: 0.6%. Ethnic
groups: Mixed European. Religions: Roman Catholic 42%, Protestant
33%, Muslim 4.3%, others 5.4%, no religion 11%. Languages: German
63.7%, French 20.4%, Italian 6.5%, Romansch 0.5%, other 9.4%.
Education: Years compulsory--9. Attendance--100%. Literacy--100%.
Switzerland sits at the crossroads of several major European
cultures, which have heavily influenced the country's languages
and cultural practices. Switzerland has four official languages--German,
French, Italian, and Romansch (based on Latin and spoken by a
small minority in the Canton Graubunden). The German spoken is
predominantly a Swiss dialect, but newspapers and some broadcasts
use High German. Many Swiss speak more than one language. English
is widely known, especially among professionals.
More than 75% of the population lives in the central plain,
which stretches between the Alps and the Jura Mountains and from
Geneva in the southwest to the Rhine River and Lake Constance
in the northeast. Resident foreigners and temporary foreign workers
make up about 20% of the population.
Almost all Swiss are literate. Switzerland's 13 university institutes
enrolled 111,100 students in the academic year of 2004-05. About
25% of the adult population holds a diploma of higher learning.
The Constitution guarantees freedom of worship, and the different
religious communities co-exist peacefully.
Switzerland consistently ranks high on quality of life indices,
including highest per capita income, one of the highest concentrations
of computer and Internet usage per capita, highest insurance coverage
per individual, and high health care rates. For these and many
other reasons, it serves as an excellent test market for businesses
hoping to introduce new products into Europe.
History
Originally inhabited by the Helvetians, or Helvetic Celts, the
territory comprising modern Switzerland came under Roman rule
during the Gallic wars in the 1st century BC and remained a Roman
province until the 4th century AD. Under Roman influence, the
population reached a high level of civilization and enjoyed a
flourishing commerce. Important cities, such as Geneva, Basel,
and Zurich, were linked by military roads that also served as
trade arteries between Rome and the northern tribes. After the
decline of the Roman Empire, Switzerland was invaded by Germanic
tribes from the north and west. Some tribes, such as the Alemanni
in central and northeastern Switzerland, and the Burgundians,
who ruled western Switzerland, settled there.
In 800, the country became part of Charlemagne's empire. It later
passed under the dominion of the Holy Roman emperors in the form
of small ecclesiastic and temporal holdings subject to imperial
sovereignty. With the opening of a new important north-south trade
route across the Alps in the early 13th century, the Empire's
rulers began to attach more importance to the remote Swiss mountain
valleys, which were granted some degree of autonomy under direct
imperial rule. Fearful of the popular disturbances flaring up
following the death of the Holy Roman Emperor in 1291, the ruling
families from Uri, Schwyz, and Unterwalden signed a charter to
keep public peace and pledging mutual support in upholding autonomous
administrative and judicial rule. The anniversary of the charter's
signature (August 1, 1291) today is celebrated as Switzerland's
National Day.
Between 1315 and 1388 the Swiss Confederates inflicted three
crushing defeats on the Habsburgs, whose aspiration to regional
dominion clashed with Swiss self-determination. During that period,
five other localities (cantons in modern-day parlance) joined
the original three in the Swiss Confederation. Buoyed by their
feats, the Swiss Confederates continuously expanded their borders
by military means and gained formal independence from the Holy
Roman Empire in 1499. Routed by the French and Venetians near
Milan in 1515, they renounced expansionist policies. By then the
Swiss Confederation had become a union of 13 localities with a
regularly convening diet administering the subject territories.
Swiss mercenaries continued for centuries to serve in other armies;
the Swiss Guard of the Pope is a vestige of this tradition.
The Reformation led to a division between the Protestant followers
of Zwingli and Calvin in the German and French parts of the country
respectively, and the Catholics. Despite two centuries of civil
strife, the common interest in the joint subject territories kept
the Swiss Confederation from falling apart. The traffic in mercenaries
as well as the alienation between the predominantly Protestant
Swiss and their Catholic neighbors kept the Swiss Confederation
out of the wars of the European powers, which formally recognized
Swiss neutrality in the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648. The Swiss
remained neutral during the War of the First Coalition against
revolutionary France, but Napoleon, nonetheless, invaded and annexed
much of the country in 1797-98, replacing the loose confederation
with a centrally governed unitary state. The Congress of Vienna
in 1815 re-established the old confederation of sovereign states
and enshrined Switzerland's status of permanent armed neutrality
in international law.
In 1848, after a brief civil war between Protestant liberals
seeking a centralized national state and Catholic conservatives
clinging on to the old order, the majority of Swiss Cantons opted
for a Federal State, modeled in part on the U.S. Constitution.
The Swiss Constitution established a range of civic liberties
and made far-reaching provisions to maintain cantonal autonomy
to placate the vanquished Catholic minority. The Swiss amended
their Constitution extensively in 1874, establishing federal responsibility
for defense, trade, and legal matters, as well as introducing
direct democracy by popular referendum. To this day, cantonal
autonomy and referendum democracy remain trademarks of the Swiss
polity.
Switzerland industrialized rapidly during the 19th century and
by 1850 had become the second most industrialized country in Europe
after Great Britain. During World War I serious tension developed
between the German, French, and Italian-speaking parts of the
country, and Switzerland came close to violating its neutrality
but managed to stay out of hostilities.
Labor unrest culminating in a general strike in 1918 marked the
interwar period, but in 1937 employers and the largest trade union
concluded a formal agreement to settle disputes peacefully, which
governs workplace relations to the present day.
During World War II, Switzerland came under heavy pressure from
the fascist powers, which after the fall of France in 1940 completely
surrounded the country. Some political and economic leaders displayed
a mood of appeasement, but a combination of tactical accommodation
and demonstrative readiness to defend the country helped Switzerland
survive unscathed. The Cold War enhanced the role of neutral Switzerland
and offered the country a way out of its diplomatic isolation
after World War II. Economically, Switzerland integrated itself
into the American-led Western postwar order, but it remained reluctant
to enter supranational bodies. Switzerland did not join the United
Nations, even though Geneva became host to the UN's European headquarters,
and the country played an active role in many of the UN's specialized
agencies. Switzerland also remained aloof in the face of European
integration efforts, waiting until 1963 to join the Council of
Europe. It still remains outside the European Union. Instead,
Switzerland in 1960 helped form the European Free Trade Area,
which did not strive for political union. Following the Cold War,
Switzerland joined the Bretton Woods institutions in 1992 and
finally became a member of the United Nations in 2002.
Government
Switzerland is a federal state composed of 26 cantons (20 are
"full" cantons and six "half" cantons for purposes of representation
in the federal legislature) that retain attributes of sovereignty,
such as fiscal autonomy and the right to manage internal cantonal
affairs. Under the 2000 Constitution, cantons hold all powers
not specifically delegated to the federation.
Switzerland's federal institutions are:
• A bicameral legislature: the Federal Assembly;
• A collegial executive of seven members: the Federal Council;
and
• A judiciary consisting of a regular court in Lausanne: the
Federal Tribunal; and special military and administrative courts.
The Federal Insurance Tribunal is an independent division of
the Federal Tribunal that handles social security questions; its
seat is in Lucerne. The Federal Criminal Court, located in Bellinzona,
is the court of first instance for all criminal cases under federal
jurisdiction. The Constitution provides for separation of the
three branches of government. The Federal Assembly is the primary
seat of power, although in practice the executive branch has been
increasing its power at the expense of the legislative branch.
The Federal Assembly has two houses--the Council of States and
the National Council. These two houses have equal powers in all
respects, including the right to introduce legislation. Legislation
cannot be vetoed by the executive nor reviewed for constitutionality
by the judiciary, but all laws (except the budget) can be reviewed
by popular referendum before taking effect. The 46 members of
the Council of States (two from each canton and one from each
half canton) are directly elected in each canton by majority voting.
The 200 members of the National Council are directly elected in
each canton under a system of proportional representation. Members
of both houses serve for 4 years.
The Federal Assembly meets quarterly for 3-week plenary sessions.
The parliamentary committees of the two houses, which are often
key in shaping legislation, meet behind closed doors, but both
majority and minority positions are presented during the plenary
sessions. The Federal Assembly is a militia parliament, and members
commonly retain their traditional professions. Individual members
of parliament have no personal staff. The Assembly can be legally
dissolved only after the adoption of a popular initiative calling
for a complete revision of the Constitution.
All citizens 18 or older have the right to vote and run for office
in national, cantonal, and communal elections unless individually
disqualified by the relevant legislature. A strong emphasis on
ballot votes arises out of the traditional Swiss belief that the
will of the people is the final national authority. Every constitutional
amendment adopted by parliament is automatically brought to the
ballot and has to carry a double majority of votes and states
in order to become effective. The voters themselves may actively
seek changes to the Constitution by means of the popular initiative:
100,000 voters may with their signatures request a national vote
on a proposed constitutional amendment. New federal legislation
also is subject to popular review, under the so-called referendum:
50,000 signatures suffice to call a ballot vote on any federal
law adopted by parliament. The Assembly can declare an act to
be too urgent to allow time for popular consideration, but this
is rare. At any rate, an act passed urgently must have a time
limit and is later subject to the same constitutional provisions
on popular review as other legislation.
The top executive body is the seven-member cabinet called the
Federal Council. The Federal Assembly individually elects the
seven Federal Councilors in a joint session of both houses at
the opening of a new legislature. Federal Councilors are elected
for 4-year terms; there are no term limits and no provision to
recall the cabinet or individual members during the legislature.
Each year, the Federal Assembly elects from among the seven Federal
Councilors a president and vice president, following the principle
of seniority. The member who is vice president one year traditionally
is elected president the next. Although the Constitution provides
that the Federal Assembly chooses and supervises the cabinet,
the latter has gradually assumed a preeminent role in directing
the legislative process as well as executing federal laws. Under
an arrangement between the four major parties called the "magic
formula" which was introduced in 1959 but ended in December 2003,
two Federal Councilors (ministers) were elected each from the
Christian Democrats, the Social Democrats, and the Free Democrats
and one from the Swiss People's Party.
Under the new magic formula starting January 1, 2004, the new
party composition of the cabinet changed to the following composition:
1 Christian Democrat, 2 Social Democrats, 2 Free Democrats, and
2 representatives of the Swiss People's Party. The Constitution
requires that Federal Councilors act collectively in all matters,
not as individual ministers or as representatives of their parties.
Each Councilor heads one of seven federal departments and is responsible
for preparing legislation pertaining to matters under its jurisdiction.
The president, who remains responsible for the department he heads,
has limited prerogatives and is first among equals (there is no
formal prime minister). The administration of justice is primarily
a cantonal function. The Federal Tribunal is limited in its jurisdiction.
Its principal function is to hear appeals of civil and criminal
cases. It also hears complaints of violations of the constitutional
rights of citizens and has authority to review cantonal court
decisions involving federal law as well as certain administrative
rulings of federal departments. However, it has no power to review
federal legislation for constitutionality. The Tribunal's 30 full-time
and 30 part-time judges are elected by the Federal Assembly for
6-year terms.
The Federal Criminal Court is the court of first instance for
criminal cases involving organized and white-collar crime, money
laundering, and corruption, which are under federal jurisdiction.
The Court’s 11 judges are elected by the Federal Assembly for
6-year terms.
The cantons regulate local government. The basic unit of local
government, which administers a village, town, or city, is the
commune or municipality. Citizenship is derived from membership
in a commune and can be conferred on non-Swiss by a commune. Cantons
are subordinate to federal authority but keep autonomy in implementing
federal law.
Political Conditions
Although it has a diverse society, Switzerland has a stable government.
Most voters support the government in the armed neutrality underlying
its foreign and defense policies. Domestic policy poses no major
problems, but the changing international environment has generated
a significant reexamination of Swiss policy in key areas such as
defense, neutrality, and immigration.
Quadrennial national elections
typically produce only marginal changes in party representation.
In recent years, Switzerland has seen a gradual shift in the party
landscape. The rightist Swiss People's Party (SVP), traditionally
the junior partner in the four-party coalition government, more
than doubled its voting share from 11% in 1987 to 22.5% in 1999,
and finally to 26.6% in 2003, thus overtaking its three coalition
partners. This shift in voting shares ended the 44-year old "magic
formula," the power-broking agreement of the four coalition parties,
and gave a second seat in the 7-person Swiss cabinet to the Swiss
People's Party at the expense of the Christian Democrats, now the
weakest party with 14.4% of the votes. For the first time in Swiss
history, the SVP has two seats in the government, reflecting its
new status as Switzerland's most popular party.
On December 10,
2003, Christoph Blocher--a self-made industrialist and main figure
of the right-populist Swiss People's Party known for his strong
opinions on asylum and migration and law and order issues--was elected
to the cabinet by parliament, replacing the incumbent Christian
Democrat Justice and Police Minister Ruth Metzler. The parliament
also elected the Free Democrat Hans-Rudolf Merz to replace retiring
Finance Minister Kaspar Villiger. Both Blocher and Merz are strong
advocates of drastic public spending cuts in order to reduce the
country's mounting $102 billion francs state deficit and are staunch
opponents to Switzerland's entering the European Union.
On June
14, 2006, the Federal Council elected Dolan Leuthard of the Christian
Democratic Party. Leuthard replaced the retiring Joseph Deiss and
has assumed the Economics and Trade portfolio that Deiss managed.
Leuthard’s election and Deiss’ resignation do not change the dynamics
of the Federal Council.
The current makeup of the government remains
fiscally conservative and against further integration with the European
Union.
The Constitution limits federal influence in the formulation
of domestic policy and emphasizes the roles of private enterprise
and cantonal government. However, the Confederation has been compelled
to enlarge its policymaking powers in recent years to cope with
national problems such as education, agriculture, energy, environment,
organized crime, and narcotics.
Economy
Despite a dearth of natural
resources, the Swiss economy is among the world's most advanced
and prosperous. Per capita income is virtually the highest in the
world, as are wages. Trade has been the key to prosperity in Switzerland.
The country is dependent upon export markets to generate income
while dependent upon imports for raw materials and to expand the
range of goods and services available in the country. Switzerland
has liberal investment and trade policies, notwithstanding agriculture,
and a conservative fiscal policy. The Swiss legal system is highly
developed, commercial law is well defined, and solid laws and policies
protect investments. The Swiss franc is one of the world's soundest
currencies, and the country is known for its high standard of banking
and financial services.
Switzerland is a member of a number of international
economic organizations, including the World Trade Organization,
the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Being a nation
that depends upon exports for economic growth, and due to the fact
that it is so closely linked to the economies of Western Europe
and the United States, Switzerland has not been able to escape recent
slowdowns experienced in these countries. During most of the 1990s,
the Swiss economy was Western Europe's weakest, with annual GDP
growth averaging 0% between 1991 and 1997. Beginning in late 1997,
the economy steadily gained momentum until peaking in 2000 with
3% growth in real terms. The economy returned to lackluster growth
during 2001-2003, but has been growing at or above potential since
2004--2.5% per annum.
The Swiss Economic Ministry reports that strong
global demand, particularly in the U.S. and Asia, and better Euro
zone growth has helped Switzerland’s economic recovery. Long-run
economic growth, however, is predicated on structural reforms. In
order to maximize its economic potential, Switzerland will need
to push through difficult agrarian and competition policy reforms.
These are essential if the government is to reduce its budget deficits
and meet its 3% growth target.
In 2005, the dollar/Swiss franc exchange
rate continued to be shaped by geopolitical tensions. The dollar
depreciated further against the Swiss franc from SF 1.49 in October
2002 to SF 1.31 in 2003, to 1.28 in 2005, and to 1.23 in July 2006.
The strengthening of the Euro, however, helped Switzerland to minimize
the pressure from a weakening dollar. The Swiss National Bank raised
interest rates on June 15, 2006 to 1.5%, the third increase since
January 2006. The Swiss National Bank also said it expected economic
growth to be a robust 2.5% in 2006 and 2007.
The number of bankruptcies
in Switzerland during 2005 reached new heights--10,800, up 3% from
2004. Bankruptcies have been on the rise for the past four years,
but associated financial losses actually fell 5.2%. Five cantons
recorded an increase in bankruptcies, with Bern, Thurgau, and Vaud
being hardest hit. The Federal Statistics Office’s analysis suggests
that the increase in bankruptcies is due in part to restructuring
and believes the numbers will continue to increase.
The recent economic
upswing has had a small impact on the labor market. Unemployment
decreased from 4.1% in December 2003 to 3.6% in July 2006. Swiss
in the 15-25 age bracket continue to fight unemployment numbers
with a rate of 5.4%, and hotel and restaurant industry workers with
10.4%.
One-fourth of the country's full-time workers are unionized.
In general, labor/management relations are good, mostly characterized
by a willingness on both sides to settle disputes by negotiations
rather than by labor action. About 600 collective bargaining agreements
exist today in Switzerland and are regularly renewed without major
problems. However, the mood is changing. The massive layoffs that
resulted from both the global economic slowdown and major management
scandals have strained the traditional Swiss "labor peace." Swiss
trade unions encouraged strikes against several companies, including
the national airline SWISS, Coca-Cola, and Orange (the French telecom
operator), but total days lost to strikes remain among the lowest
in the OECD. Uncertainties concerning under-funded pension funds,
and the prospect of a potential hike in the retirement age have
stirred further street protests.
Switzerland's machinery, metals,
electronics, and chemicals sectors are world-renowned for precision
and quality. Together they account for well over half of Swiss export
revenues. In agriculture, Switzerland is about 60% self-sufficient.
Only 7.5% of the remaining imports originated from the U.S.
Swiss
farmers are one of the most highly protected and subsidized producer
group in the world. OECD estimates show that Switzerland is subsidizing
more than 70% of its agriculture, compared to 35% in the EU. According
to the draft "2011 Agricultural Program", Switzerland intends to
reduce its subsidies by SF 638 million to SF 13.4 billion (U.S.
$10.5 billion) beginning in 2008.
Tourism, banking, engineering,
and insurance are significant sectors of the economy and heavily
influence the country's economic policies. Swiss trading companies
have unique marketing expertise in many parts of the world, including
Eastern Europe, the Far East, Africa, and the Middle East. Not only
does Switzerland have a highly developed tourism infrastructure
(making it a good market for tourism-related equipment and services),
the Swiss also are intrepid travelers. Per capita, more Swiss visit
the United States every year than from any other country. Tourism
is the most important U.S. export to Switzerland (earning almost
$1.5 billion). In 2004, more than 285,000 Swiss came to the United
States as tourists.
The Swiss economy earns roughly half of its
corporate earnings from the export industry, and 62% of Swiss exports
are destined for the EU market. The EU is Switzerland's largest
trading partner, and economic and trade barriers between them are
minimal. In the wake of the Swiss voters' rejection of the European
Economic Area Agreement in 1992, the Swiss Government set its sights
on negotiating bilateral sectoral agreements with the EU. After
more than 4 years of negotiations, an agreement covering seven sectors
(research, public procurement, technical barriers to trade, agriculture,
civil aviation, land transport, and the free movement of persons)
was achieved at the end of 1998. Parliament officially endorsed
the so-called "Bilaterals I" in 1999, and the Swiss people approved
them in a referendum in May 2000. The agreements, which had to be
ratified by the European Parliament as well as legislatures in all
15 EU member states, entered into force on June 1, 2002. Switzerland
has so far attempted to mitigate possible adverse effects of nonmembership
by conforming many of its regulations, standards, and practices
to EU directives and norms. Full access to the Swiss market for
the original 15 EU member states entered into force in June 2004,
ending as a result the “national preference”. The Swiss agreed to
extend these preferences to the 10 new EU members on September 25,
2005.
The Swiss Government embarked in July 2001 on a second round
of bilateral negotiations with the EU known as “Bilaterals II”.
Talks focused on customs fraud, environment, statistics, trade in
processed agricultural goods, media, the taxation of savings, and
police/judicial cooperation (dubbed the Schengen-Dublin accords).
Amid a fierce political debate over the essence of Swiss-EU relations
and populist warnings against EU workers and criminals entering
Switzerland, the Schengen-Dublin package was approved on June 5,
2005 by a referendum of 54.6%. Fears of cheap labor coming from
new EU member states have prompted the government to provide for
tripartite surveillance committees to ensure that decent wages are
enforced. As part of the bilateral agreement on the taxation of
savings signed in June 2003, Swiss banks will levy a withholding
tax on EU citizens' savings income. The tax, which started on July
1, 2005, will increase gradually to 35% by 2011, with 75% of the
funds being transferred to the EU.
The Swiss federal government
remains deeply divided over EU membership as its long-term goal,
and in a March 2001 referendum more than 70% of the voters rejected
rapid steps toward EU membershipage The issue of EU membership is,
therefore, likely to be shelved for several years, if not a decade.
In May 2005, the government said it could sign a framework agreement
with the European Union, as an alternative to joining the organization,
to encourage dialogue and create a platform for closer cooperation.
But in parallel, the cabinet reaffirmed its wish to strengthen ties
with other non-EU trading partners in Asia and America. Exploratory
talks on a Free Trade Agreement between the U.S. and Switzerland
failed to result in negotiations, due to Swiss problems with free
trade in agriculture, but the two sides did agree to a new framework
for economic, trade, and investment discussions. This new agreement
is the Swiss-U.S. Trade and Investment Cooperation Forum (the “Forum”)
and is currently assessing areas where the two governments could
facilitate greater trade and investment flows.
Switzerland ranks
17th among the main trading partners of the U.S. worldwide. The
United States is the second-largest importer (11.5%) of Swiss goods
after Germany (20%). The U.S. exports more to Switzerland each year
than to all the countries of the former Soviet Union and Eastern
Europe combined, and Switzerland imports more U.S. products and
services than does Spain. In addition, the United States is the
largest foreign investor in Switzerland, and conversely, the primary
destination of Swiss foreign investment. It is estimated that 200,000
American jobs depend on Swiss foreign investments. Total U.S.-Swiss
bilateral trade increased from $15.33 billion during 2003 to $16
billion in 2004.
Defense
On May 18, 2003, Swiss voters approved
the military reform project "Army XXI" that will drastically reduce
the size of the Swiss Army. In January 2004, the 524,000-strong
militia started paring down to 220,000 conscripts, including 80,000
reservists. The defense budget of currently SF 4.3 billion ($3.1
billion) will be trimmed by SF 300 million, and some 2,000 jobs
are expected to be shed between 2004 and 2011. The mandatory time
of service will be curtailed from 300 to 260 days. All able-bodied
Swiss males aged 20 to 30 must serve. Thereafter, most personnel
are assigned to civil protection duties until the age of 37.
A new
category of soldiers called "single-term conscripts" will discharge
the total time of service of about 300 days of active duty in one
go. Recruiting is on a voluntary basis and should not exceed 20%
of a year's draft. The armed forces have a small nucleus of about
3,600 professional staff, half of whom are either instructors or
staff officers, with the remainder mostly being fortification guards.
The army has virtually no full-time active combat units but is capable
of full mobilization within 72 hours.
Women may volunteer to serve
in the armed forces and may now join all units, including combat
troops. About 2,000 women already serve in the army but, so far,
have not been allowed to use weapons for purposes other than self-defense.
The armed forces are organized in four army corps and an air force
and are equipped with modern, sophisticated, and well-maintained
gear. In 1993, the Swiss Government procured 34 FA-18s from the
United States.
Foreign Relations
On September 10, 2002, Switzerland
became a full member of the United Nations. Switzerland had previously
been involved as party to the Statute of the International Court
of Justice and member of most UN specialized agencies, as well as
the International Atomic Energy Agency. Switzerland has long participated
in many UN activities, including the Economic Commission for Europe,
UN Environment Program, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, UN
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, UN Conference
for Trade and Development, UN Industrial Development Organization,
and the Universal Postal Union (UPU).
Prior to its formal accession,
Switzerland had maintained a permanent observer mission at UN Headquarters
since 1948. Switzerland also is a member of the following international
organizations: World Trade Organization, Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development, European Free Trade Association, Bank
for International Settlements, Council of Europe, and Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). In 1992, Swiss voters
approved membership in the Bretton Woods organizations but later
that year rejected the European Economic Area agreement, which the
government viewed as a first step toward EU membershipage
The Swiss
Constitution declares the preservation of Switzerland's independence
and welfare as the supreme objective of Swiss foreign policy. Below
this overarching goal, the Constitution sets five specific foreign
policy objectives: further the peaceful coexistence of nations;
promote respect for human rights, democracy, and the rule of the
law; promote Swiss economic interests abroad, alleviate need and
poverty in the world; and the preservation of natural resources.
Traditionally, Switzerland has avoided alliances that might entail
military, political, or direct economic action, but in recent years
the Swiss have broadened the scope of activities in which they feel
able to participate without compromising their neutrality. Swiss
voters first rejected UN membership by a 3-to-1 margin in 1986 but
in March 2002 adopted it, albeit in a very close election, making
Switzerland the first country to join the UN based on a popular
referendum decision. In similar fashion, the electorate rejected
a government proposition to deploy Swiss troops as UN peacekeepers
(Blue Helmets) in 1994, but Switzerland joined NATO's Partnership
for Peace and the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council in 1996 and
1997, respectively, and deployed Yellow Berets to support the OSCE
in Bosnia. In June 2001, Swiss voters approved new legislation providing
for the deployment of armed Swiss troops for international peacekeeping
missions under UN or OSCE auspices as well as closer international
cooperation in military training.
Switzerland maintains diplomatic
relations with almost all countries and historically has served
as a neutral intermediary and host to major international treaty
conferences. The country has no major dispute in its bilateral relations.
Since 1980, Switzerland has represented U.S. interests in Iran.
Switzerland played a key role in brokering a truce agreement between
the Sudanese Government and Sudan's Peoples Liberation Army (SPLA)
for the Nuba Mountain region, signed after a week's negotiations
taking place near Lucerne in January 2002. The Swiss feel a moral
obligation to undertake social, economic, and humanitarian activities
that contribute to world peace and prosperity. This is manifested
by Swiss bilateral and multilateral diplomatic activity, assistance
to developing countries, and support for the extension of international
law, particularly humanitarian law.
Switzerland (mainly Geneva)
is home to many international governmental and nongovernmental organizations,
including the International Committee of the Red Cross (whose flag
is essentially the Swiss flag with colors reversed--the Red Cross
historically being a Swiss organization). One of the first international
organizations, the Universal Postal Union, is located in Bern.
The
Swiss Government on June 25, 2003, eased most of the sanctions against
the Republic of Iraq in accord with UN Security Council Resolution
(UNSCR) 1483. The government lifted the trade embargo, flight restrictions,
and financial sanctions in place since August 1990. The weapons
embargo and the asset freeze, the scope of which was extended, remain
in force, and restrictions on the trade in Iraqi cultural goods
were newly imposed. Though not a member at the time, Switzerland
had joined UN sanctions against Iraq after the invasion of Kuwait.
Switzerland in recent years joined UN and EU economic sanctions
imposed on Sierra Leone, UNITA (Angola), Liberia, Serbia and Montenegro,
Burma, Zimbabwe, Sudan, Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Cote
d'Ivoire. On October 15, 2003, the Federal Council ended the import
restrictions on raw diamonds from Sierra Leone and lifted sanctions
against Libya. Switzerland in October 2000 implemented an ordinance
to enforce UN sanctions against the Taliban (UNSCR 1267), which
it subsequently amended in April 2001 in accord with tighter UN
regulations (UNSCR 1333). On May 2, 2002, the Swiss Government eased
the sanctions regime in accord with UNSCR 1388 and 1390, lifting
the ban on the sale of acetic acid (used in drug production), Afghani
Airlines, and Afghani diplomatic representations. The weapons embargo,
travel restrictions, and financial sanctions remain in force. The
Swiss Government in November 2001 issued an ordinance declaring
illegal the terrorist organization al Qaeda as well as possible
successor or supporting organizations. More than 200 individuals
or companies linked to international terrorism have been blacklisted
to have their assets frozen. Thus far, Swiss authorities have blocked
about 72 accounts totaling 34 million francs.
Switzerland has furnished
military observers and medical teams to several UN operations. Switzerland
is an active participant in the OSCE, its foreign minister serving
as Chairman-in-Office for 1996. Switzerland also is an active participant
in the major nonproliferation and export control regimes. Under
a series of treaties concluded after World War I, Switzerland assumed
responsibility for the diplomatic and consular representation of
Liechtenstein, the protection of its borders, and the regulation
of its customs.
U.S.-Swiss Relations
Switzerland is a democratic
country subscribing to most of the ideals with which the United
States is identified. The country is politically stable with a fundamentally
strong economy. It occupies an important strategic position within
Europe and possesses a strong military capability. It has played
an increasingly important role in supporting the spread of democratic
institutions and values worldwide, as well as providing humanitarian
relief and economic development assistance.
U.S. policy toward Switzerland
takes these factors into account and endeavors to cooperate with
Switzerland to the extent consistent with Swiss neutrality. The
first 4 years of cooperation under the U.S.-Swiss Joint Economic
Commission (JEC) invigorated bilateral ties by recording achievements
in a number of areas, including consultations on anti-money laundering
efforts, counter-terrorism, and pharmaceutical regulatory cooperation;
an e-government conference; and the re-establishment of the Fulbright
student/cultural exchange program.
The United States and Switzerland
signed three new agreements in 2006 that will complement the JEC
and will deepen our cooperation and improve our relationshipage The
first of the new agreements is the Enhanced Political Framework
and was signed by Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs
Nicholas Burns and Swiss State Secretary Michael Ambühl. The second
agreement is the Trade and Investment Cooperation Forum and was
signed by then-U.S. Trade Representative Robert Portman and then-Economics
and Trade Minister Joseph Deiss. The last agreement is the revised
Operative Working Agreement on Law Enforcement Cooperation on Counterterrorism
and was signed by U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez and Swiss
Justice Minister Christoph Blocher.
The first official U.S.-Swiss
consular relations were established in the late 1820s. Diplomatic
relations were established in 1853. The U.S. ambassador to Switzerland
also is accredited to the Principality of Liechtenstein.
The U.S. Embassy in Switzerland is at Jubilaeumsstrasse
93, 3005 Bern, tel: (41) (31) 357-7011.
The U.S. Mission to the European Office of the United Nations
and other International Organizations is in Geneva at Route de
Pregny 11, 1292 Chambesy, tel: (41) (22) 749-4111.
The U.S. Mission to the WTO is in Geneva at Avenue de
la Paix 1-3, 1202 Geneva, tel: (41) (22) 749-4111.
The U.S. Delegation to the Conference on Disarmament (CD)
is in Geneva at Route de Pregny 11, 1292 Chambesy, tel: (41) (22)
749-4407.
America Centers and Consular Agencies are also maintained in
Zurich and Geneva.
Information above courtesy of U.S. State Department
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