Ukrainian parliament adopts law to expand military draft – The Washington Post

Posted: April 12, 2024 at 5:51 am

KYIV Ukraines parliament approved legislation Thursday that officials say will simplify conscription, aiding an expected mobilization that could press hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian men into the fight against Russias invasion.

As Western aid has slowed, including a $60 billion U.S. package stalled in Congress for six months, Ukraines armed forces have been struggling with a severe shortage of soldiers, ammunition and weapons allowing Russia to advance on the battlefield.

Ukraines unicameral parliament, the Verkhovna Rada, voted overwhelmingly for the mobilization measure, with 283 votes in favor, one opposed and 49 abstentions, according to a Telegram post by Yaroslav Zheleznyak, a lawmaker from the opposition Holos party, that included a photo of the voting results.

The measure, which has not been published in full, clarifies who is exempt from the military draft while generally simplifying the process. It still needs President Volodymyr Zelenskys signature.

However, it does not address two of the most contentious issues: how many soldiers ultimately will be drafted, and whether those who have served since the start of Russias invasion, more than two years ago, should be discharged.

Gen. Valery Zaluzhny, the countrys former commander in chief, had said Ukraine needed to call up as many as 500,000 fresh troops to counter Russias superior number of forces.

This, combined with Moscows overwhelming firepower, has resulted in Russian troops advancing along the front line, including seizing the long-embattled eastern city of Avdiivka.

However, Zelensky has resisted calls for half a million to be conscripted, which risked setting off public backlash. Discussion over who and how many people to mobilize has proved divisive in a society that otherwise has united against a common Russian foe.

Disagreement over the issue between the president and his top general contributed to Zelenskys dismissing Zaluzhny in February. Zaluzhnys replacement, Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrsky, said in a recent interview that the number of soldiers Ukraine will mobilize was significantly reduced from 500,000 after conducting a personnel audit.

Neither Syrsky nor Zelensky have specified a new figure, and its unlikely they will. Mobilization is unpopular. While most Ukrainians are highly supportive of the military and recognize that more men are needed at the front, few who havent volunteered to fight after more than two years of war want to do so now. Announcing that hundreds of thousands of men could be drafted risks stoking panic.

Zelensky has said he recognizes that the countrys armed forces need reinforcements which he said would help bolster Ukrainian positions as well as counter a Russian disinformation campaign claiming that Ukrainians do not want to fight.

This claim has found a foothold among some Republican members of the U.S. Congress, who have blocked the aid package proposed by President Biden.

Zelensky said in an interview on Ukrainian television Saturday night that the Russians raised this issue in the West in such a way that today [Western officials] ask us, If you dont want mobilization, the parliament doesnt want to vote, then why do you need help?

On Sunday, Rep. Michael R. Turner (R-Ohio), who chairs the House Intelligence Committee, said it was absolutely true that some Republican members of Congress were repeating Russian propaganda, though he did not specify whom he had in mind.

Last week, Zelensky signed a law lowering the draft age to 25 from 27, in another bid to replenish Kyivs badly depleted troops.

On Thursday, parliament also voted to remove a provision from the new mobilization measure that would limit soldiers tours of duty to three years. Existing Ukrainian law says those fighting must serve until the war is over.

Zelensky had publicly said demobilization something families of soldiers have been pushing for is a priority for him. But with Kyivs military ranks already depleted, its unclear how Ukraine could afford to demobilize so many troops.

The general staff of Ukraines armed forces had requested that the language about demobilization be removed and resubmitted within eight months as a separate measure on troop rotation, Defense Ministry spokesman Dmytro Lazutin told Ukrainian television Wednesday.

We cannot make hasty decisions now, Lazutin said. It is certain that there are many, many populist opinions. At the same time, we must understand that the escalation of Russian aggression continues, the offensive is literally on the entire front line, and it is impossible to weaken the defense forces at the moment.

Isabelle Khurshudyan and Serhii Korolchuk contributed to this report.

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Ukrainian parliament adopts law to expand military draft - The Washington Post

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