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US urges Ukraine to lower fighting age to 18 to bolster ranks against Russia

Reuters

Ukraine should consider lowering the age of military service for its soldiers to 18 from 25, a senior US administration official said on Wednesday, putting pressure on Kyiv to bolster its fighting forces in the country’s war with Russia.

Speaking to reporters, the official said Ukraine was not mobilising or training enough new soldiers to replace those lost on the battlefield.


A Ukrainian service member attends military exercises during drills at a training ground, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Chernihiv region, Ukraine, on 22nd November, 2024. PICTURE: Reuters/Maksym Kishka/File Photo

“The need right now is manpower,” he said. “The Russians are in fact making progress, steady progress, in the east, and they are beginning to push back Ukrainian lines in Kursk…Mobilisation and more manpower could make a significant difference at this time as we look at the battlefield today.”

Russian forces are making gains in Ukraine at the fastest rate since the early days of the 2022 invasion, taking an area half the size of London over the past month, analysts and war bloggers said this week.

In April, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskiy signed into law legislation to lower the mobilisation age for combat duty from 27 to 25, expanding the number of civilians the army could mobilise to fight under martial law, which has been in place since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February, 2022.

US President Joe Biden’s administration has been a staunch supporter of Ukraine, but that backing may diminish when President-elect Donald Trump comes to power in January. Trump has tapped Keith Kellogg, a retired lieutenant general who presented him with a plan to end the war in Ukraine, to serve as a special envoy for the conflict.



A source in Zelenskiy’s office said the country did not have what it needed to equip the troops it was mobilising now.

“Right now, with our current mobilisation efforts, we don’t have enough equipment, for example armoured vehicles, to support all the troops we are calling up,” the source said. “We cannot compensate for our partners’ delays in decision-making and supply chains with the lives of our soldiers and of the youngest of our guys.”

US officials recognise getting younger troops is politically fraught for Zelenskiy’s government and Ukraine has discussed the option of offering incentives for younger people to sign up in a non-mandatory recruitment drive, another official said.


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Behind closed doors, Germany also has been calling on Ukraine to lower its conscription age, according to a German defence ministry source.

While Biden is still in office, the United States will continue to provide Kyiv with hundreds of thousands of artillery rounds, thousands of rockets of various ranges, hundreds of vehicles and weapons systems to support combat operations as well as air defence interceptors, the first US senior administration official said.

“Ammunition and vehicle shortages are not the most critical issue facing Ukraine. They now have healthy stockpiles of the vital tools, munitions and weapons that they need to succeed on the battlefield,” he said.

“Without a pipeline of new troops, the existing units who are fighting heroically on the front lines, cannot rotate out to rest, refit, train and reequip.”

– Additional reporting by SUSAN HEAVEY, THOMAS BALMFORTH, SIMON LEWIS and SABINE SIEBOLD

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