Friday Fun Fact: Neutral countries

Photo: ianlord via Flickr
Most people know that Switzerland is a neutral country, but may not realize that the Swiss are not alone in their neutrality. There are a total of eight neutral countries: Austria, Costa Rica, Finland, Ireland, Liechtenstein, Sweden, Switzerland and Turkmenistan.
Broadly, neutrality means not taking sides in armed conflict between warring countries, but it has a range of real-world manifestations: For instance, Switzerland and Sweden are famous for their large armies (and those armies, in turn, are famous for pocketknives and bicycles, respectively), while other countries keep very small fighting forces. Likewise, Ireland allows foreign military forces inside its borders—specifically, military aircraft can land at Shannon Airport—while other neutral countries don't.
Neutral countries in Europe (Austria, Sweden, Ireland and Finland, but not Switzerland) also find themselves in the conundrum of belonging to—and being bound by the policies of—the European Union, which is not neutral.







Interesting post.
Who knew there was so much nuance in neutrality?
Posted by: Matt | May 23, 2008 at 09:58 AM
It's not easy not picking sides.
"Nuance in neutrality" would have made a great headline. Thanks for the comment, Matt.
Posted by: Eric from EF | May 23, 2008 at 10:30 AM