Ukraine is targeting 18 to 24-year-olds with a military recruitment campaign aimed at addressing a manpower crisis on the front lines.
The scheme dangles lucrative benefits in front of would-be recruits, but this has already "angered" some long-serving troops, said Politico.
The campaign was launched with a promotional video featuring a montage of soldiers leaping into action as cash "rolls off a printer", said the Financial Times. To a soundtrack of rock music, a message encourages viewers to "change your life in a year".
Recruits are offered "general military training to Nato standards, specialised instruction and social benefits", including a package of a million hryvnia (£19,000) paid in instalments. Together with monthly support and additional pay for combat missions, the total income for a year's service could reach £38,000.
Other perks include subsidies for rents and mortgages, state-funded higher education and the right to travel abroad after completion of service. All of these benefits have upset some Ukrainian soldiers who joined the army without any perks on the table. "The state devalues all those who voluntarily joined the army at the beginning of a full-scale war," one long-time serviceman told Politico.
There are "high rates of desertion" amid "falling morale and heavy casualties", added the Financial Times. Franz-Stefan Gady, a senior fellow at the UK-based International Institute for Strategic Studies, said a "corrosive effect" of the Trump administration's push for a peace deal was that Ukrainians were now wondering, "if the war is going to be over in a couple of months", why "sign up now and potentially get killed". |