Ukraine Wants EU To Send Military-Aged Men Back Home as Kyiv runs out of troops

Ukraine Wants EU To Send Military-Aged Men Back Home as Kyiv runs out of troops

Ukraine Wants EU To Send Military-Aged Men Back Home as Kyiv runs out of troops

Various media sources reported that Ukraine has urged the European Union to reconsider temporary protection measures for military-aged Ukrainian men living across Europe, as Kyiv struggles with mounting troop shortages more than four years into the war with Russia.

According to statements cited by European media, Ukrainian authorities have requested Brussels to exclude men of fighting age from the EU’s Temporary Protection Directive (TPD) — a framework introduced after Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022 to provide residency, work permits, and social welfare access to displaced Ukrainians.

The proposal surfaced during discussions among EU member states on extending protection measures beyond their current expiration in March 2027, with many governments reportedly favoring an extension until 2028.

Kyiv Seeks Return of Draft-Age Men

Speaking during EU migration talks in Luxembourg, EU Migration Commissioner Magnus Brunner acknowledged that one of the options being considered is to limit temporary protection for military-age Ukrainian men.

“This is also what the Ukrainians are asking us to do,” Brunner reportedly stated, referring to Kyiv’s efforts to replenish military manpower amid increasing battlefield pressures.

According to Eurostat, approximately 4.33 million Ukrainians are currently under temporary protection in EU countries as of spring 2026. Estimates suggest that up to one million military-aged men are among those residing across the bloc.

Since the escalation of the Russia-Ukraine war in 2022, Ukraine has enforced strict mobilization rules, barring most men aged 18 to 60 from leaving the country. However, exceptions and irregular border crossings have allowed many draft-age men to relocate abroad.

Sweden Pushes Tougher Line on Ukrainian Men Staying in Europe

Calls for stricter policies are gaining support among some European leaders.

Sweden’s Migration Minister Johan Forssell publicly argued that military-aged Ukrainian men should remain in Ukraine to support the war effort rather than seek refuge in Europe.

“It is essential for us to provide Ukrainians with protection, but at the same time, the war needs to be fought and won,” Forssell said. “For that to happen, it is essential that more men stay in Ukraine and fight.”

Forssell reportedly clarified that any proposed restrictions would likely apply only to new arrivals, rather than Ukrainians already protected under EU schemes.

However, any major modification to the Temporary Protection Directive would require unanimous approval from all EU member states, making changes politically sensitive and potentially contentious.

Ukraine’s Mobilization Crisis Deepens

Kyiv has increasingly struggled to maintain troop numbers amid heavy battlefield attrition, desertions, and draft evasion.

Ukraine’s mobilization campaign has become controversial domestically, with widespread reports of forced conscription efforts — often referred to locally as “bussification” — where recruitment officers allegedly detain military-aged men in public spaces, workplaces, and residential areas.

Videos of confrontations between draft officers and civilians have repeatedly sparked outrage on social media, fueling public debate inside Ukraine over mobilization tactics.

At the same time, several European countries — including Germany, Poland, Denmark, Hungary, and the Czech Republic** — have moved to tighten welfare benefits and social assistance programs for Ukrainian refugees, citing economic pressure and changing domestic political priorities.

Broader Debate Over Refugees and Europe’s War Policy

The issue has reignited debate within Europe over burden-sharing, refugee protections, and long-term support for Ukraine.

Some EU officials argue that granting asylum-like protections to military-aged men undermines Kyiv’s ability to sustain its defense against Russia. Others warn that revoking protections could violate humanitarian principles and create legal complications.

Meanwhile, Moscow has repeatedly accused Ukraine’s Western allies of prolonging the conflict through military assistance, framing the war as a Western-backed proxy confrontation against Russia.

As Brussels prepares proposals in the coming weeks, the future status of hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian men living across Europe may become one of the most politically sensitive questions in the EU’s Ukraine policy.

With EU leaders expected to revisit the issue before 2027, the debate over protection versus military necessity is likely to intensify amid continued battlefield uncertainty.

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