Royal Oak Tribune

Ukraine lowers its conscripti­on age to 25 to replenish its beleaguere­d troops

- By Hanna Arhirova and Samya Kullab

>> Ukraine lowered its draft-eligible age for men from 27 to 25 on Wednesday, reflecting the strain that more than two years of war with Russia has put on its military and the need to infuse its depleted ranks with new conscripts.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy signed three bills into law aimed at strengthen­ing the country’s beleaguere­d forces, which are trying to hold the front lines in fighting that has sapped Ukraine’s ranks and stores of weapons and ammunition.

The new laws, which will also do away with some draft exemptions and create an online registry for recruits, might add around 50,000 troops to the military, said Oksana Zabolotna, an analyst with the Center for United Actions, a government watchdog in Kyiv.

That would be a tenth of the 500,000 additional troops that Zelenskyy said in December that the military wanted to mobilize. But after signing a security agreement with Finnish President Alexander Stubb in Kyiv on Wednesday, Zelenskyy said an audit requested by Ukraine’s newly appointed commander-in-chief determined that the 500,000 figure was wrong, partly because existing troops could be sent from the rear to the front. He didn’t say why that option wasn’t considered previously.

Zelenskyy said he wasn’t ready to say publicly how many new conscripts the Ukrainian army will need.

“I can say that Russia is preparing to mobilize an additional 300,000 military personnel on June 1,” Zelenskyy told reporters.

Ukrainian Defense Ministry statistics say the country’s military had nearly 800,000 troops in October. That doesn’t include National Guard or other units. In total, 1 million Ukrainians are in uniform, including about 300,000 who are serving on front lines.

Conscripti­on has been a sensitive matter amid Ukraine’s growing shortages of infantry and ammunition, which have helped give Russia the battlefiel­d initiative. Russia’s own problems with manpower and planning have so far prevented it

from taking full advantage of its edge.

The average soldier’s age on both sides is over 40, military analysts say. Some Ukrainians worry that lowering the minimum conscripti­on age to 25 and taking more young adults out of the workforce could backfire by further harming the war-ravaged economy, which is why the draft age wasn’t simply set at 18. But the problem has become more pressing because Kyiv is expecting a renewed push by Russian forces this spring or summer.

The Russian military said Wednesday that it has experience­d a recent surge in enlistment­s, attributin­g it to public outrage over last month’s attack on a Moscow concert hall that killed more than 140 people. About 16,000 people have signed up in the last 10 days, Russia’s Defense Ministry said, though its claim couldn’t be independen­tly verified.

An affiliate of the Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for the concert hall attack, but the Kremlin has insisted, without providing evidence, that Ukraine and the West played a role, despite their strong denials.

Zelenskyy took almost a year to sign the law lowering the conscripti­on age, perhaps reflecting how unpopular such a move might be.

Antonina Piliuhina, the 49-year-old Kyiv mother of a 21-years old son, said she opposed lowering the draft age.

“I have just one son, I am a single mother,” Piliuhina said. “What did I raise him for all these years, for him to be taken away and then killed by someone for fun? I don’t need this.”

Mykola Petrovskyi, a 28-year-old social worker, said that although he loves Ukraine, he doesn’t think it’s

right to send people to fight if they’re unwilling.

“I am not ready to go somewhere tomorrow and kill people,” Petrovskyi said. “It’s not because I’m not a patriot of my country, it’s because I am not ready to kill. I am not born for this. I am a person who’s ready to help save someone’s life, but not take one.”

But Metelya, a 37-year-old soldier who used his nom de guerre instead of his real name due to security concerns, said he was all for lowering the draft age. He said he’s been fighting since 2014 — the year Russia illegally annexed Crimea from Ukraine — and new troops are needed.

“If an 18-years old boy was ready to fight with us when we fought for Kyiv, then why can’t a 25-years old adult man do the same?” he asked.

Zabolotna, the government watchdog analyst, said even though there are about half a million men ages 25 to 27, she estimates only about 50,000 would be added to the ranks.

“Some of them are unfit for service, some have left, some are (in the) reserve or have the right to deferment,” she said.

The law’s introducti­on is a signal that Ukraine is facing up to the reality that it’s in a war of attrition and of competitio­n for resources, said Orysia Lutsevych, head of the Ukraine forum and deputy director of the Russia and Eurasia Program at the Chatham House think tank in London.

Zelenskyy was hoping for a relatively quick end to the war, she said. But he realizes that Putin “is not just fighting Ukraine. His main enemy is the United States and its presence in Eastern Europe.”

 ?? VADIM GHIRDA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Photograph­s of fallen Ukrainian servicemen are placed at a memorial in Independen­ce Square, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Wednesday.
VADIM GHIRDA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Photograph­s of fallen Ukrainian servicemen are placed at a memorial in Independen­ce Square, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Wednesday.

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