Gustav's main aim is to recapture some …
Years: 1788 - 1788
June
Gustav's main aim is to recapture some of the territory in Finland that had been lost to the Russians in the war of 1741–43.
One Swedish army is to advance through Finland; a second army, accompanied by the Swedish coastal flotilla, is to advance along the Finnish coast into the Gulf of Finland; while a third army sails with the Swedish battle fleet in order to land at Oranienbaum to advance on Saint Petersburg, intending to catch the Russian fleet by surprise.
The plan is to attack Kronstadt and land a force to assault the Russian capital.
The goal is to instigate a coup de état in Russia and depose Empress Catherine II.
Sveaborg is set as the forward base of operations for the campaign.
However, the whole concept is based on the assumption that the Swedish open sea fleet will be able to decisively defeat its Russian counterpart.
Incidentally, Russian forces are not totally unprepared for the war, since the bulk of the Russian Baltic Fleet is planned to be transferred against the Ottoman Empire and has made preparations of its own for war.
War is far from popular, even less so in the eastern part of Sweden (modern day Finland).
Even senior military leaders voice their opposition to the plans to go to war.
Especially among the officers of the army, unrest spreads widely.
This can partly be explained by the still-remaining supporters of Georg Magnus Sprengtporten's plans for Finnish independence.
One Swedish army is to advance through Finland; a second army, accompanied by the Swedish coastal flotilla, is to advance along the Finnish coast into the Gulf of Finland; while a third army sails with the Swedish battle fleet in order to land at Oranienbaum to advance on Saint Petersburg, intending to catch the Russian fleet by surprise.
The plan is to attack Kronstadt and land a force to assault the Russian capital.
The goal is to instigate a coup de état in Russia and depose Empress Catherine II.
Sveaborg is set as the forward base of operations for the campaign.
However, the whole concept is based on the assumption that the Swedish open sea fleet will be able to decisively defeat its Russian counterpart.
Incidentally, Russian forces are not totally unprepared for the war, since the bulk of the Russian Baltic Fleet is planned to be transferred against the Ottoman Empire and has made preparations of its own for war.
War is far from popular, even less so in the eastern part of Sweden (modern day Finland).
Even senior military leaders voice their opposition to the plans to go to war.
Especially among the officers of the army, unrest spreads widely.
This can partly be explained by the still-remaining supporters of Georg Magnus Sprengtporten's plans for Finnish independence.
