Friday, November 28, 2025 - French President Emmanuel Macron unveiled a voluntary military service on Thursday as he seeks to bolster France's defences amid growing concerns over Russia's threat to European nations. Macron said volunteers – the bulk of them aged 18 and 19 – will start serving next year in a 10-month programme in France’s mainland and oversea territories only, with a target of 50,000 annual recruits by 2035.
Macron announced Thursday that France is restoring
military service on a voluntary basis in the face of the growing threat
posed by Russia and the risk of a new conflict breaking out in Europe.
Almost three decades after France scrapped conscription, the
head of state unveiled the new programme during a visit to an infantry brigade
stationed in southeastern France.
"A new national service is set to be gradually
established, starting from next summer," Macron said in a speech at the
Varces military base, in the French Alps.
Young volunteers will serve in France’s mainland and oversea
territories only, not in France’s military operations abroad, Macron said.
Around 80% will be aged 18 and 19, with the rest made up of candidates aged up
to 25 who have specific skills, such as engineers.
Macron's announcement comes more than three and a half years
into Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, with Macron and other
French officials warning that Moscow risks not stopping at Ukraine's borders.
"The day that you send a signal of weakness to Russia —
which for 10 years has made a strategic choice to become an imperial power
again, that’s to say advance wherever we are weak — well, it will continue to
advance," the French president told radio RTL on Tuesday.
He said France will aim to spend €64 billion in annual
defence spending in 2027, the last year of his second term. That would be
double the €32 billion in annual spending when he became president in 2017.
To display this content from YouTube, you must enable
advertisement tracking and audience measurement.
France is not considering restoring conscription, which
ended in the country in 1996.
The country's top general, armed forces chief of staff
Fabien Mandon, sparked uproar at home last week by warning that
France must be ready "to lose its children", adding that Russia is
"preparing for a confrontation by 2030 with our countries".
While around a dozen states have some form of conscription,
the use of military service is uneven across Europe.
But France would join European countries like Baltic states Latvia and Lithuania which
have brought it back in recent years, while others such as Denmark have
toughened its terms.
Military service is seen as a way of bolstering armies with
recruits, but also of providing a large pool of potential reservists, who could
be called up in the case of a future war.
The French armed forces have approximately 200,000 active
military personnel and 47,000 reservists, numbers expected to increase to
210,000 and 100,000 respectively by 2030.
Accused of warmongering by the left, General Mandon has
expressed no regret over his comments last week, saying the aim was to
"alert and prepare" amid a "rapidly deteriorating" context.
Mandon argued on Saturday that the reactions to his comments
"show that this is something that was perhaps not sufficiently perceived
in our population".
But ahead of Thursday's announcement, Macron and other
officials have been at pains to douse the outcry caused by the general's
forthright comments and fears that French youth were heading for the front
lines.
The president on Tuesday said he needed to dispel any
notion "we are going to send our young people to Ukraine".

0 Comments