What’s сhanged
- The upper age limit for regular conscription. The most significant change brought about by the new law is the raising of the age limit for mandatory military service. Whereas previously men had to serve between the age of 18 and 28, they can now be forced to serve until they are 31.
- The upper age limit for mobilisation from the reserves. Until now, any Russian man under the age of 50 who had served in the military could be mobilised. That age has now been raised to 55, though the change will be implemented gradually, with the age limit increasing by one year annually, and could ultimately bring several million more people into the army.
- The penalty for evading mandatory conscription. Under the new law, the fine for conscripted citizens who ignore summons to conscription offices is 30,000 rubles (€300) — 10 times higher than it was previously.
- Tightened border control. Under the new law, anyone called up is forbidden from leaving the country from the moment their digital summons is issued. Previously, conscripts had to receive their summons in person from a draft officer before a travel ban would take effect.
What hasn’t changed
- The lower age limit. The initial draft of the law proposed raising not only the upper age limit but also the lower age limit for conscription from 18 to 21 so that more would-be conscripts “could receive higher education” before serving. However, Duma deputies scrapped this part of the bill “given the current military-political situation”.
- The protocol for current 27- to 30-year-olds. The new laws will not affect Russians currently in their late twenties; these men will be enrolled in the reserves according to the old rules, according to Kartapolov. The new rules will apply only to the younger generation and will come into effect on January 1, 2024.
Why the new legislation?
The bill’s authors claim that around 80,000 Russians age out of the mandatory conscription window without having actually done any military service, and that of these, “around 30,000” have no legal exemption.
The number of draft dodgers has increased since the invasion of Ukraine. As Novaya Gazeta Europe reported in October, the number of lawsuits challenging conscription also rose sharply last year. Enlistment offices fell far short of their quotas in 2022: of the 134,500 men who were called up, a third ultimately evaded the draft.
Human rights activists believe that the raising of the age limit is an attempt to “re-conscript” those who avoided mobilisation. The Russian army is in dire need of more personnel, military researcher Kirill Mikhailov told Novaya Gazeta Europe. It needs many more men even just to “adequately defend [the] areas [it already holds],” he said, recalling what happened in the Kharkiv region of Ukraine in 2022, when the Russian army was defeated “because it simply did not have enough troops”.
Meanwhile, raising the age limit for the reserves means that 4.8 million additional Russians will be eligible for mobilisation, returning the country’s reserve — in theory — to numbers it hasn’t seen in 17 years. This figure does not include men who have legitimate exemptions from mobilisation.