Younger men have been offered hefty incentives along with conscription exemptions for one-year contracts with the military
Ukraine has launched a new program offering voluntary military contracts to men under 25, amid efforts to replenish dwindling army ranks and calls from Western backers to lower the age for mandatory conscription. The initiative was unveiled by Ukraine’s Defense Ministry on Tuesday to specifically target young people aged 18-24 in addition to the standard contract program.
Young Ukrainians have been offered to apply for one-year contract service with the army in return for financial and other benefits, as well as a guaranteed exemption from conscription for one year after their contract ends, according to the program’s website.
The contract offers applicants 1 million Ukrainian hryvnia ($24,000) for one year in the army, roughly four times the annual salary for the standard military contract. Additionally, they can receive 120,000 hryvnia ($2,880) and more each month for combat missions. Other perks include zero-interest mortgages, free travel and utility benefits, free education, and a right to travel abroad after one year of service.
Reports about Ukraine’s plans to enlist younger men have been circulating for weeks amid severe troop shortages due to heavy casualties, desertions, and draft evasion. Following the escalation of the conflict with Moscow in 2022, Ukraine declared a general mobilization and lowered the conscription age to 25, although multiple reports have claimed Washington is urging Kiev to further lower it to 18. Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky has so far refused to take the step, claiming that his army’s main need is not more men, but more weapons from Western backers for the troops that it already has.
In an interview with Reuters released last week, Zelensky said the contract program will be an alternative way to draft younger men without including them in the mandatory mobilization. He refused to speculate how many men Kiev plans to recruit with its new program, saying that it would likely take several months to determine “whether it is successful and to what extent.”
The prospect of Kiev drafting men younger than 25 has been vastly unpopular among Ukrainians. MP Aleksandr Dubinsky on Monday slammed the new contract program as Zelensky’s “attempt to buy mobilization.”
“It is a desperate attempt to drive young people to the front with pretty promises. Zelensky cannot forcibly mobilize Ukrainians, so now he is trying to buy their service,” he wrote on his Telegram channel.
The lawmaker warned that the plan will create a conflict between those who have already been mobilized and the new contract soldiers, with the former “fighting for pennies” while the latter will be paid significantly more and given bonuses.
“Zelensky, with his panicky policy, is not just disrupting mobilization – he is planting a bomb under the army’s combat readiness,” Dubinsky claimed. He argued that the authorities in Kiev should focus on providing serving soldiers with necessities instead of “luring” youngsters into army ranks.