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Russia
WorldRussia & Central Asia

Explainer | What does Putin’s ‘partial’ mobilisation mean for Russia?

  • Russia’s president has announced a partial mobilisation of reservists that could raise available troop numbers by up to 300,000
  • Vague wording of the mobilisation decree may give Russian authorities a wide degree of latitude when implementing it

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A billboard in St Petersburg, Russia, depicts a soldier with the slogan ‘Serving Russia is a real job’. Photo: EPA-EFE
Reuters
President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday ordered Russia’s first mobilisation since World War II after suffering a major battlefield reversal in Ukraine, an attempt to turn the military tide in what he has cast as a defining East-West clash.

The mobilisation is, for now, being officially described as a partial one that will steadily draw in 300,000 reservists from across the world’s largest country over a period of months, rather than a full call-up that would rely on what Russia’s defence minister says is a vast reserve force of 25 million people.

Men and women aged from 18 to 60 years old can theoretically be called up as reservists according to Russian legislation, depending on their rank.

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Western military analysts have long said that Russia is suffering serious manpower shortages on the Ukraine battlefield due to heavy losses, while Russian nationalists have for months been calling for some kind of mobilisation to inject new life into what they have described as a stuttering campaign.

Ukraine launched its own mobilisation programme two days before Russia’s February 24 invasion and soon afterwards announced martial law, which banned men aged 18-60 from leaving the country.

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It is currently on its fourth wave of mobilisation. The exact number of mobilised reservists in Ukraine is classified but official pronouncements suggest it is at least 400,000.

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