Berlin will coordinate the repatriation of military-age males with Kiev, the German chancellor has said
Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz attend a press conference at the Chancellery on April 14, 2026 in Berlin, Germany. © Nadja Wohlleben / Getty Images
Berlin
and Kiev will coordinate efforts to return military-age Ukrainian men
residing in Germany to their home country, German Chancellor Friedrich
Merz has announced following a meeting with Vladimir Zelensky.
As
Ukrainian forces suffer mounting losses in the conflict with Russia and
the pool of willing recruits continues to shrink, draft enforcement
squads have increasingly turned to violent methods to fill the ranks in
recent months. Men are being snatched off the streets, from workplaces
and residential areas, as evidenced by hundreds of videos circulating
online.
The heavy-handed tactics employed by Ukrainian press gangs
have led to a rise in violent confrontations with unwilling recruits,
their families, and passersby, with multiple recruits and draft
enforcement officers being injured or even killed.
Speaking at a joint press conference with Zelensky in Berlin on Tuesday, Merz reiterated the German government’s “support for Ukraine’s efforts to reduce the number of Ukrainian men of military age leaving [their home] country.” According to the German chancellor, “this is essential to ensuring Ukraine’s defense capabilities, social cohesion, and reconstruction.”
“We need rapid, tangible progress here, also in the interest of both sides,” he stressed.
Zelensky concurred that the issue “must be addressed,” adding that “of course, our armed forces would want these people to return to Ukraine.”
In
January, Merz similarly called on Ukraine to create conditions that
would encourage its young men to remain in the country rather than flee
to Western Europe.
Following the escalation of the Ukraine
conflict in 2022, Germany became the top destination for Ukrainian
migrants in the EU, taking in more than a million people, according to
the Federal Statistical Office.
Some Ukrainian officials have acknowledged escalating public discontent with the forced mobilization campaign.
According
to Vadim Ivchenko, a member of the Ukrainian parliament’s national
security committee, only around 8-10% of new personnel entering the
armed forces are willing recruits.
Moscow has repeatedly accused Kiev’s Western backers of waging a proxy war against Russia “to the last Ukrainian.”