Kiev’s Western backers continue to pressure the Ukrainian government to address manpower shortages
Kiev could consider further lowering the conscription age, but only after the country receives sufficient military equipment from its international sponsors, Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky signaled during a meeting with German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius on Tuesday.
According to Zelensky, ensuring that all soldiers are adequately equipped must take priority before expanding the conscription base. He emphasized that the country’s armed forces face acute shortages of essential equipment, including armored vehicles and artillery, rather than personnel, as reported by Ukrainian media
“We have more than 100 brigades on the battlefield, and each of them needs to be fully staffed every day. But we are constantly facing shortages – especially in armored vehicles, artillery, and other necessary equipment,” he said, highlighting that many units are struggling due to frequent equipment failures and ongoing maintenance issues.
“Therefore, when we talk about increasing the number of our troops, we must first address the issue of adequate supplies… Our partners have all these requests,” he added.
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Zelensky’s comments come amid growing pressure from Kiev’s sponsors, particularly the United States, to lower Ukraine’s conscription age to 18 to bolster troop numbers.
The Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) suggested last week that Kiev could soon comply with Western pressure to draft younger soldiers over concerns that the country’s defenses could collapse. Several Ukrainian outlets, as well as some Russian diplomats, have speculated that Zelensky is keeping that move as a last-ditch bargaining chip.
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US President-elect Donald Trump repeatedly promised to achieve a negotiated settlement of the Ukraine conflict in one day after taking office but has since admitted it could take up to six months. His national security adviser, Mike Waltz, recently said that Kiev must acknowledge territorial “reality” and stressed that the issue is not “just about munitions, ammunition, or writing more checks” but about “seeing the front lines stabilize so that we can enter into some type of deal.”
“If Ukrainians have asked the whole world to be all in for democracy, we need them to be all in for democracy,” Waltz told ABC News on Sunday. “And they certainly have fought bravely, and they certainly have taken a very noble and tough stand. But we need to see those manpower shortages addressed.”
Former UK Defense Secretary Ben Wallace also recently criticized Zelensky for trying to “preserve” the youths, instead of adopting a full-scale “mass conscription.”
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Ukraine’s mobilization drive continues to face challenges due to widespread draft evasion and desertions. According to the Ukrainian military, approximately 500,000 men are suspected of evading conscription since February 2022, despite toughened penalties and stricter enforcement measures. At the same time, nearly 96,000 criminal cases have been opened against servicemen who abandoned their positions, most of them in 2023, according to Bloomberg.
Moscow believes the conflict is a Western-led proxy war against Russia, which the West intends to wage “to the last Ukrainian.” Last month, Russian Defense Minister Andrey Belousov said that Ukraine has lost 1 million servicemembers to death and injury, with more than half of that number occurring in 2024 alone.
January 15, 2025 at 05:25AM
RT