Ukraine wants 30,000 conscripts MONTHLY to continue its senseless war with Russia
- Ukraine's top general Oleksandr Syrsky states that 30,000 new conscripts are needed monthly to counter Russia’s offensive, as Russian forces now outnumber Ukrainians 10-to-1 in some areas.
- Russia has 623,000 troops deployed – a five-fold increase since 2022 – and could potentially mobilize up to 20 million trained personnel, adding 8,000 to 9,000 troops monthly.
- Ukraine faces corruption, draft evasion and public resistance despite lowering the conscription age to 25 and offering lucrative incentives (e.g., $24,000 salaries, zero-interest mortgages).
- Mobilization efforts have been uneven – with reports of bribery, violent confrontations and forced detentions, raising tensions between military needs and civil liberties.
- With high attrition rates and uncertain Western aid, Ukraine's ability to sustain its military hinges on recruitment success, mirroring historical struggles of nations in prolonged wars.
Ukraine wants at least 30,000 conscripts on the battlefield every month to counter Russia's continued offensive, according to the country's top general.
Oleksandr Syrsky, commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian Armed Forces (AFU), put forward this demand during an interview published by the
LB.ua outlet on Wednesday, April 9. According to the general dubbed "The Butcher," Moscow has already deployed around 623,000 troops – with a five-fold increase since the special military operation began in 2022. Syrksy continued that Russia can draft up to five million trained and experienced troops, for a total headcount of 20 million.
"Every month, they increase it by 8,000 to 9,000," the general told the news outlet. "In a year, it's 120,000 to 130,000."
In some frontline areas, Russian troops outnumber their Ukrainian counterparts by a ratio of 10 to one. To sustain resistance against the Russian army, Syrsky said
the AFU must mobilize 30,000 soldiers every month. (Related:
Ukrainian Armed Forces have been drafting 30,000 troops each month since May, reports reveal.)
But the general's demand appears to be an impossible dream, given Kyiv's mounting battlefield losses and dwindling frontline forces. Ukraine is scrambling to recruit tens of thousands of new soldiers each month – but corruption, draft evasion and deep public resistance threaten to undermine its mobilization efforts. With the government lowering the draft age and offering lucrative enlistment incentives, the struggle to sustain its fighting force has reached a critical point, raising concerns about Ukraine's long-term capacity to resist Russian advances.
Cash for combat: Kyiv's new strategy to boost troop numbers
Ukraine initially implemented a general mobilization after Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, barring most men aged 18 to 60 from leaving the country. However, enforcement has been uneven, with widespread reports of bribery, evasion and even
violent confrontations between draft officers and civilians.
In response, authorities lowered the conscription age to 25 last year while imposing stricter penalties for draft dodging. Now, the government is offering unprecedented financial incentives
through a new voluntary program targeting younger men.
According to a
Russia Today piece from February, the program offers applicants a salary of one million Ukrainian hyrvnia ($24,000) for one year in the military – roughly four times the annual standard military salary. They can also receive 120,000 hryvnia ($2,880) and more every month for combat missions. Zero-interest mortgages, free travel and utility benefits, free education and a right to travel overseas after one year of service await those who sign up with the AFU.
The crisis reflects a fundamental challenge for Ukraine: Sustaining prolonged warfare against a far larger adversary while maintaining public support. Historically, nations facing existential threats – such as Britain during World War II or Israel in its early conflicts – resorted to sweeping mobilization.
But Ukraine's struggle also bears resemblance to the Soviet Union's desperate conscription efforts in World War II, where relentless casualties forced increasingly draconian measures, damaging morale. Today, as enlistment officers resort to forcibly detaining men in public, the tension between military necessity and civil liberties grows ever starker.
Though Kyiv has avoided acknowledging total conscription figures, the sheer scale of its recruitment drive underscores the war’s brutal toll. With attrition rates high and Western aid increasingly uncertain, Ukraine’s ability to maintain its fighting force may soon hinge not just on weapons, but on whether it can persuade – or compel – enough citizens to keep joining the fight.
Visit
Chaos.news for more similar stories.
Watch this clip of
Ukrainian police officers beating to death a young man dodging mandatory conscription in the western Ukrainian city of Rovno.
This video is from the
Cynthia's Pursuit of Truth channel on Brighteon.com.
More related stories:
Ukrainian general: NOBODY can sit out the draft, and ALL MUST FIGHT.
Draft official tells Spanish newspaper El Pais: Ukrainians are rejecting the army.
Ukraine so desperate for new troops that Zelensky is now drafting PRISONERS to fight his war.
Sources include:
SHTFPlan.com
RT.com 1
RT.com 2
Brighteon.com