France is to introduce voluntary military service of 10 months aimed mainly at young people aged 18 and 19, as concern grows in Europe about the threat from Russia.
In a speech to troops in Varces-AlliĂšres-et-Risset in the French Alps, the French president, Emmanuel Macron, said the service would begin by mid-2026 and would help France respond to âaccelerating threatsâ on the global stage.
Almost 30 years after France scrapped conscription, Macron said he would not go back on that decision, but added: âWe need mobilisation.â
âFrance cannot remain idle,â Macron said. He believed French youth had a âthirst for engagementâ, saying there was a young generation âready to stand upâ for their nation.
Under the new military service, men and women, mostly aged 18 and 19, could volunteer to sign up for 10 months. They would be paid a minimum of âŹ800 per month and receive food and accommodation, as well as a 75% discount on rail travel. They would be deployed âonly on national soilâ, Macron said. A minority with specific qualifications, for example in engineering or medical skills, could be aged up to 25.
There is so far no suggestion that military service in France could again be compulsory, as it was before then-president Jacques Chirac abolished conscription in 1997.
âWe cannot return to the time of conscription,â Macron said. âThis hybrid army model corresponds to the threats and risks ahead, bringing together national service youth, reservists, and the active army.â
The plan will cost âŹ2bn, which Macron called âa significant and necessary effortâ.
The scheme aims to bring in 3,000 volunteers in 2026, rising to 10,000 by 2030. âMy ambition for France is to reach 50,000 youth by 2036, depending on evolving threats,â Macron said. After the programme, participants could integrate into civilian life, become a reservist, or stay in the armed forces, he said.
He said the plan was âinspired by practices of our European partners … at a time when all our European allies advance in response to a threat that weighs on us allâ.
The move is part of a broader shift across Europe, where nations who have long enjoyed the decades-long tranquillity of US security guarantees are concerned about Donald Trumpâs shifting priorities and Russiaâs aggressive posturing.
Macronâs announcement brings France in line with nearly a dozen other European nations such as Germany and Denmark who have launched similar projects.
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 80,000 respectively by 2030.
Macronâs office said polling data suggested high support for the armed forces among 18- to 25-year-olds.
The presidentâs announcement comes after controversy over comments from Gen Fabien Mandon, Franceâs armed forces chief, who last week caused an uproar when he said France needed to steel itself for possible future losses against Russian aggression.
âWhat we lack … is the strength of character to accept suffering in order to protect who we are,â he said, adding France must âaccept losing its childrenâ.
Macron has sought to play down Mandonâs comments.
âWe must absolutely, immediately, dispel any confused idea suggesting we are going to send our young people to Ukraine,â Macron told RTL radio on Tuesday, alluding to Russiaâs 2022 full-scale invasion of the country.
CĂ©dric Perrin, the president of the French senateâs foreign affairs, defence and armed forces committee, defended Mandon. Perrin told Reuters: âHis remarks were taken out of context … but if being a bit blunt is necessary to make the French understand the situation we are in, then he was right to do it.â
ClĂ©mence GuettĂ©, of the leftwing party La France Insoumise, said of the new voluntary military service on RTL radio: âFrance isnât at war and this canât be the priority for young people.â
SĂ©bastien Chenu, an MP for Marine Le Penâs far-right National Rally party, said the new voluntary military service was âgoing in the right directionâ.
Reuters and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report.
