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What are the main obstacles to restoration of mandatory military service in 
Serbia and Croatia


N1 Belgrade

4–5 minutes

  _____  

Possible restoration of mandatory military service has become a regional topic 
when, after Serbia, a similar initiative was launched in Croatia as well. 
January 1, 2025 is mentioned in that country as the earliest date for a 
possible implementation of this initiative. 

The topic was launched in Croatia primarily as a response to global security 
challenges, such as the war in Ukraine and the Middle East, but also to 
strained relations in the region. However, as in Serbia, the return of military 
service in Croatia, which is a member of NATO, is accompanied by numerous 
doubts such as the length of military service, the number of recruits annually, 
conditions of accommodation and training of soldiers, etc.

According to experts’ in both countries, the current needs of the Serbian Army 
are around 10,000 recruits annually, while the Armed Forces of Croatia would 
need around 2,600 recruits a year.

Proponents of the return of mandatory military service in Croatia are aware 
that for the implementation of this initiative, it is necessary to fulfill a 
number of prerequisites, such as adequate conditions for the accommodation of 
regular soldiers, then a sufficient number of officers and non-commissioned 
officers who would carry out training, material means for training, which 
raises the question of how much it would all cost.

It is also an open question how long the reactivated mandatory military service 
would last in Croatia, and so far there is a discussion between one month and 
six months period. Experts estimate that the basic training of soldiers can be 
carried out to some extent in three months, while part of the specialist 
training can be carried out in six months.

The Croatian Ministry of Defense deems that the optimal solution would be for 
mandatory military training to last three months.

In Serbia, President Aleksandar Vucic hinted in January this year at a 
possibility of the military term being “extended” from 90 to 100 or “maybe 110 
days.”

One of the arguments for the return of mandatory military service is the fact 
that in the last two to three years, interest in voluntary military service in 
Croatia has drastically decreased, so according to the latest information, the 
number of recruits is between 350 and 400 annually.

In Serbia, the number of soldiers who voluntarily serve in the army is around 
1,200 recruits per year, and military service lasts six months, three times 
longer than in Croatia.

One of the biggest obstacles to the return of military service in Croatia is 
the fact that in the last year of mandatory military service, which was in 
2008, as many as 70 percent of recruits appealed to conscientious objection. In 
Serbia, that percentage was somewhat lower – about fifty percent of recruits 
did not want to serve military service under arms in 2010.

In both Croatia and Serbia, speech of conscience is a constitutional category 
that cannot be changed without amending the Constitution. The Croatian Defense 
Law stipulates that a military conscript can submit a request for civilian 
service from the time he is entered into the military records until the end of 
his military service.



 

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