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One of Ukraine’s biggest war challenges is being tackled on the streets of Kyiv

Many weary troops are desperate to be replaced after more than two years of virtually non-stop service

Dan Peleschuk
Monday 15 July 2024 12:12 BST
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Military analysts describe regenerating troop manpower as one of Kyiv’s central battlefield hurdles
Military analysts describe regenerating troop manpower as one of Kyiv’s central battlefield hurdles (Reuters)

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Seeing the military patrol handing out call-up papers on the outskirts of Kyiv, one man slipped into a nearby store. Another refused to even stop for the officers. Others, however, quietly obliged.

While men may be coming round to Ukraine’s ramped-up mobilisation drive to replenish troop numbers more than 28 months since Russia’s invasion, they are less eager to fight than before, said a draft officer, who uses the call sign “Fantomas”.

“Now, as far as I know, most of the queues [at draft offices] are people who want to obtain some sort of exemption [from fighting],” said the 36-year-old, who was accompanied by Reuters on a recent draft patrol in the Ukrainian capital.

The combat veteran is on the front lines of the effort to redouble the draft despite waning public enthusiasm for wartime service as military analysts describe regenerating troop manpower as one of Kyiv’s central battlefield challenges.

President Volodymyr Zelensky lowered the draft age to 25 from 27 in April and signed off on an overhaul of the mobilisation process that entered force in May, obliging men under 60 to renew their personal data at draft offices or online.

Though recruitment numbers remain shrouded in wartime secrecy, some political and military officials have said the changes, including a campaign to increase voluntary recruitment, have got the mobilisation effort back on track after two months.

Emergency workers at the site of Okhmatdyt children’s hospital hit by Russian missiles in Kyiv
Emergency workers at the site of Okhmatdyt children’s hospital hit by Russian missiles in Kyiv (Evgeniy Maloletka)

The Ukrainian military told Reuters in a written statement that the conscription rate had more than doubled in May and June compared to the previous two months, without providing the figures.

Spokesperson Bohdan Senyk described that as a “positive trend”. The average age of a mobilised soldier remained unchanged at around 40.

Strengthened by long-delayed Western aid, Ukraine’s forces have struggled for months to hold the line against Russian troops inching forward in the east.

Many weary troops are desperate to be replaced after more than two years of virtually non-stop service with no clarity on when they will be demobilised from an armed forces of around 1 million.

Asked about a figure of 200,000 additional troops cited in a German newspaper, Roman Kostenko, secretary of parliament’s national defence committee estimated that the military could enlist that many by the year’s end if the process continued at its current pace.

That, he said, could allow Ukraine to consider legislation to demobilise some troops, though the interior minister warned doing so without replacing a proportional share of them could weaken the front.

Mathieu Boulegue , a defence analyst for the Washington-based Center for European Policy Analysis, said the 200,000 estimate was encouraging but that the more critical task would be training them and distributing them to the front correctly.

Ukraine needs to “invest human capital smartly and efficiently where it is needed. Because in as much as you can get anyone to drive a truck or clean toilets, you can’t get effective warfighters that easily,” he said.

Russia, meanwhile, is recruiting around 30,000 troops per month for its war effort while suffering “very high” losses, a senior Nato official said on Tuesday. He added that Moscow lacked the munitions and troops to start a major offensive.

Since the mobilisation overhaul, some draft offices have struggled to cope with the influx of men who have come to register or update their data by the 16 July deadline.

“More people are coming than we are able to accept,” said a deputy head of the draft office where Fantomas works. “Sometimes processing drags on to one o’clock at night.”

The official, who requested anonymity, echoed Fantomas and said a “very, very big” portion of men were seeking exemptions, though he insisted things were on track.

“We’re fulfilling our assigned tasks. I wouldn’t say to 100 per cent, but not bad.”

Reports of draft corruption and social media footage of scuffles between recruiters and citizens soured the public mood in the lead-up to the springtime rule changes.

In an April survey commissioned by public broadcaster Suspilne, around 50 per cent of Ukrainians said they believed mobilisation was going poorly, and 60 per cent said they had a negative perception of draft offices.

Facing public opposition, lawmakers stopped short of pushing through more severe sanctions against draft-dodgers as part of the overhaul.

Fantomas, who was wounded in eastern Ukraine last year, said 70 per cent of his interactions with people he approaches on the street are positive.

He and other military officials have said conflicts such as those captured on film are rare, often torn out of context and exploited by pro-Russian accounts to discredit recruiters, but have been successful in blunting enthusiasm.

He admitted he had once been attacked on patrol, but said he refused to fight back for fear of being caught on camera.

“The one part where I would be defending myself would make it into a video, and only that would be made to go viral.”

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