No compass in their army knives?

By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published March 3, 2007

ZURICH, Switzerland - What began as a routine training exercise almost ended in an embarrassing diplomatic incident after a company of Swiss soldiers got lost at night and marched into neighboring Liechtenstein.

According to Swiss daily Blick, the 170 infantry soldiers from the neutral country wandered more than a mile across an unmarked border into the tiny principality early Thursday before realizing their mistake and turning back.

A spokesman for the Swiss army confirmed the story, but said that there were unlikely to be any serious repercussions for the mistaken invasion.

"We've spoken to the authorities in Liechtenstein and it's not a problem," Daniel Reist told the Associated Press on Friday.

Officials in Liechtenstein also played down the incident.

Interior Ministry spokesman Markus Amman said nobody in Liechtenstein had even noticed the soldiers, who were carrying assault rifles but no ammunition.

"It's not like they stormed over here with attack helicopters or something," he said.

Liechtenstein, which has about 34,000 inhabitants and is slightly smaller than Washington, D.C., does not have an army.

Fast Facts:

One big family

Can't complain: Liechtenstein uses Swiss money, and Switzerland operates its postal, telegraph, and phone systems, plus represents Liechtenstein in diplomacy and trade.

Familiar tangle: The Swiss stumble reminded one newspaper of 2002, when British Royal Marines launched a practice assault on Spain. Their target? The nearby British colony of Gibraltar.

Sources: World Book, Guardian

Ellie