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European armies struggling to recruit soldiers

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According to an assessment in Politico, the problem for European countries is no longer recruiting new soldiers, but persuading existing ones not to leave.

This week, French Armed Forces Minister Sébastien Lecornu unveiled a ‘talent retention’ plan to incentivise military personnel to stay in the service.

This development comes just days after an annual report to the German parliament revealed that 1,537 soldiers will leave the Bundeswehr by 2023, reducing the German armed forces to 181,514 personnel.

“These discussions are now taking place in all capitals, in all democracies with professional armies without conscription,” Lecornu said on Monday, referring to the United Kingdom and the United States. At NATO meetings we can talk about equipment, but now we are also talking … about the level of retention [of personnel],” he said.

As Europe tries to rebuild its armies in response to the war in Ukraine, countries such as Croatia are considering reintroducing conscription. Others, such as Denmark, are planning to extend it to women.

Germany abolished conscription in 2011, but with many in the army ageing, there are discussions about reintroducing some form of national service.

Soldier salaries: Money talks

For countries that rely on professional armies, the challenge is to make the armed forces attractive, but this is difficult in times of low unemployment, fierce competition from the private sector and widespread teleworking.

In France, military personnel stay in the armed forces on average one year less than before. In the UK, there is an annual shortfall of 1,100 soldiers, the equivalent of two infantry battalions, even though the government has outsourced recruitment to the private company Capita.

Money is also a factor in the personnel shortfall. One of the key measures in the French plan is to increase pensions by incorporating bonuses; salaries will also be raised.

The problem, however, according to Politico, is that working conditions are not as attractive, with chronic overtime, months away from home and missed convalescence periods the order of the day.

Families are important too, it’s not just about the soldier

“It’s not about recruiting, it’s about retaining families,” Admiral Lisa Franchetti, chief of naval operations for the US Navy, told a conference in Paris earlier this year.

In Poland, the new government announced earlier this year that it would raise salaries by around 20 per cent in a bid to retain soldiers. The minimum monthly salary for a soldier rose from 4,960 zlotys (1,150 euros) to 6,000 zlotys. The Polish army has grown from 95,000 in 2015 to 215,000 this year.

The French plan includes help with housing, access to healthcare and childcare. Couples who both work for the Ministry of the Armed Forces will be able to change jobs together, even if one is a civilian.

“I would rather recruit less to improve retention than go on a recruitment spree where the number of people retained is constantly decreasing,” said Lecornu.

Germany wants women in army

As part of Germany’s efforts to strengthen its national defence, the government wants to increase the number of personnel in the armed forces to 203,000 by the early 2030s, but recruitment has been slow to pick up.

Eva Högl, a member of the Bundestag’s special committee on the armed forces, said that reintroducing some form of conscription was one way to turn things around, but that targeting women was a more obvious move to halt the decline because the potential in this area was “far from exhausted”.

Legislation passed last year aims to make conditions more attractive, including more support for childcare and higher pensions.

There are problems not only with working hours, but also with basic infrastructure. “When I visit the units, I no longer hear that helmets and protective vests are missing, but that lockers are,” Högl wrote in his annual report.

According to Högl, the renovation of barracks and military facilities will cost around 50 billion euros. That is half of the total special fund the government has set up to renew the armed forces after the war in Ukraine.

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European Investment Bank to lend to defence projects

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The EU’s lending arm, the European Investment Bank (EIB), announced on Wednesday (8 May) that it was changing its long-standing policy of not investing in military products by lifting restrictions on dual-use investments.

In a statement, the EIB’s board of directors said it had approved “the updated definition of dual-use goods and infrastructure eligible for financing by the EIB Group”, removing the minimum threshold of expected revenues from civilian applications or the share of civilian users in a defence-related investment.

Previously, the dual-use lending criteria limited the Bank’s investment in defence-related projects to civilian applications that denied their military use.

EU finance ministers, who act as the EIB’s directors, agreed to “facilitate financing” by paving the way for “private intermediary financing” for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) active in security and defence.

They also added projects and infrastructure used by the military or police that also serve civilian needs to the bank’s list of “appropriate targeted investments”.

The move will expand the bank’s ability to invest in products and technologies used only by the armed forces, including cybersecurity, radar, satellite technology, infrastructure and equipment, as long as they “do not pose a lethal risk”.

“The changes are expected to accelerate investment and improve access to EIB Group financing for the European security and defence sector,” the EIB said in a statement.

The EIB had already committed EUR 6 billion under the Strategic European Security Initiative (SESI) and the European Investment Fund’s (EIF) Defence Capital Facility.

While the European defence industry and defence ministries have long been asking the EIB to increase its contribution to the EU’s growing defence effort, this request was only put on the table of finance ministers in February, and EIB President Nadia Calviño launched a two-month consultation process with the European Commission.

According to several sources with knowledge of the negotiations, one of the key conditions for the EIB to move beyond its traditional lending mandate is its ability to maintain its environmental, social and governance (ESG) ratings as well as its top credit rating.

In particular, the triple-A core credit rating allows the lender to obtain very favourable borrowing conditions on the market. As Euractiv has previously reported, this is a key priority for the bank’s shareholders (i.e. the bloc’s 27 member states), which neither the bank nor national governments want to jeopardise.

Last week, US credit rating giant Moody’s became the first rating agency to confirm that not only the EIB’s ESG score but also its overall credit rating would be put under review if significant changes were made to the dual-use policy.

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Denmark and Sweden agree on joint Baltic defence cooperation

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The Danish and Swedish Defence Ministers, Troels Lund Poulsen and Pål Jonson, signed a Memorandum of Understanding on Tuesday in which the two countries agreed to strengthen their defence cooperation, including joint procurement of military equipment and cooperation in the Baltic Sea region.

The closer defence cooperation was agreed in a memorandum of understanding during an official visit to Stockholm on Tuesday.

The document states that the cooperation agreement ‘will remain within the framework of NATO, the EU and the Nordic Defence Cooperation, NORDEFCO, and will be supported by regular bilateral consultations’.

Under the agreement, Copenhagen and Stockholm will ‘explore’ the joint procurement of military vehicles used by both armies, such as CV90 infantry fighting vehicles.

Specifically, Denmark and Sweden will coordinate the purchase of equipment whenever possible,’ the Danish Ministry of Defence said in a press release. This cooperation could possibly include the purchase of CV90 infantry fighting vehicles (IKK), which are used by both Sweden and Denmark,’ the Danish Ministry of Defence said in a press release.

Sweden and Denmark have agreed to donate CV90 vehicles to Ukraine in 2023, while both armies need to replenish their own stocks.

Both Sweden and Denmark have donated Stridsfordon 90 (CV 90) vehicles to Ukraine, and we share the view that continued support for Ukraine is vital,” the Swedish defence minister said.

According to the Danish Defence Minister, this cooperation became even more natural when Sweden joined NATO and both countries pledged to work together for the security of the Baltic region.

For example, Sweden and Denmark will expand air policing cooperation in the Baltic Sea region, based on agreements on access to each other’s airspace and bases for the benefit of NATO allies, including the security of the Danish island of Bornholm and the strategic Swedish island of Gotland.

In addition, as Sweden is currently considering sending a battalion to Latvia, the document proposes that both countries contribute a battalion or battle group to the Canadian-led presence in Ādaži, Latvia, on a rotational basis after the Swedish parliament votes on the issue.

“In this way, Denmark and Sweden will be able to work together on a rotational basis, starting from Denmark’s Camp Valdemar in Ādaži,” the Danish Ministry of Defence said in a press release.

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Pro-Palestine protests spread to European campuses: police attacked in Amsterdam and Berlin

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Students across the UK, including in Cambridge and Oxford, have launched protests in solidarity with the Palestinian people and their fellow students around the world.

Similar to protests in the US, Canada and France, camps have been set up on campuses calling for a boycott of Israel and the withdrawal of investment from the country.

Students have set up camps at London University’s School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) and the universities of Oxford, Cambridge, Liverpool and Edinburgh.

In a joint statement, the organisers of Oxford Action for Palestine and Cambridge for Palestine said: ‘Over 100 universities around the world have decided to take bold and urgent action on behalf of Palestine. As members of these organisations, we reject our universities’ complicity in Israel’s war crimes against the Palestinian people and refuse to stand by while Israel legitimises its campaign of mass murder, starvation and displacement.

Protesters in Oxford and Cambridge arrived on Monday morning with supplies, sleeping bags and banners. The banners read ‘No more universities in Gaza’ and ‘Stop the genocide’.

A large banner reading ‘Welcome to the People’s University for Palestine’ was hung outside the camp outside Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford.

Oxford lecturers support protests

They also demanded that Oxford and Cambridge universities divest from all companies linked to Israeli genocide and occupation, support the rebuilding of Gaza’s education system, end institutional links with Israeli universities, and protect the safety of students and staff involved in pro-Palestinian actions.

Over 170 Oxford faculty and staff signed a letter in support of the camp and its aims.

Set up on King’s Parade in central Cambridge, the camp’s activities included ‘de-escalation’ training for protesters, a rally and a dinner funded by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign. The Guardian reports that a crowdfunding campaign has raised nearly £6,000 for vital supplies needed to make the camp long lasting, permanent and effective.

Other universities involved so far include University College London, Manchester, Newcastle, Sheffield, Leeds, Warwick, Swansea, Goldsmiths and Bristol in the UK, as well as Sciences Po in France, Trinity College Dublin in Ireland, the University of Lausanne in Switzerland and the University of Copenhagen in Denmark.

Police disperse camp in Berlin

On Tuesday, German police broke up a protest by hundreds of pro-Palestinian activists who had occupied the courtyard of Berlin’s Free University earlier in the day.

The demonstrators had set up around 20 tents and formed a human chain around them.

Police used loudspeakers to call on students to leave the campus.Police were also seen carrying some students away, and there were scuffles between police and demonstrators.

Police used pepper spray against some of the protesters. The school administration said in a statement that the protesters refused to engage in dialogue and that the police were called to evacuate the campus.

125 arrested in Amsterdam

On Tuesday, Dutch police arrested around 125 activists while breaking up a similar pro-Palestinian encampment at the University of Amsterdam.

In a statement on social media platform X, Amsterdam police claimed their actions were ‘necessary to maintain order’ after the protests turned violent.

Footage aired by national broadcaster NOS showed police using a mechanical digger to break down barricades and police with batons and shields moving in, beating some protesters and uprooting tents. According to NOS, the protesters had erected barricades made of wooden pallets and bicycles.

Demonstrators had occupied a small island at the university on Monday, calling for a break in academic relations with Israel over the war in Gaza.

Police ended the protest in Amsterdam early Tuesday afternoon by cordoning off the area with metal fences.

A statement from the school said police had ended the demonstration on the Roeterseiland campus on Tuesday evening ‘due to public order and security concerns’.

The war between Israel and Hamas is having a huge impact on students and staff. We share the anger and confusion about the war and understand that there are protests about it. We stress that dialogue on this issue within the university is the only solution,’ the statement said.

Protests also held in Finland and Denmark

In Finland, dozens of protesters from the solidarity group Students for Palestine camped outside the main building of the University of Helsinki and said they would remain there until Finland’s largest academic institution severed academic ties with Israeli universities.

In Denmark, students set up a pro-Palestinian camp at the University of Copenhagen, pitching some 45 tents outside the campus of the Faculty of Social Sciences.

The university said students were allowed to protest, but urged them to respect campus rules.

The statement argued that the administration ‘cannot and should not express opinions on behalf of university staff and students on political issues, including the ongoing conflict in Israel and the Palestinian territories’.

Demonstrations in Bologna, Rome and Naples

In Italy, students at the University of Bologna, one of the oldest universities in the world, set up a tent camp over the weekend to demand an end to the war in Gaza, as Israel prepared for an offensive in Rafah.

Student groups organised similar, largely peaceful protests in Rome and Naples.

More than a dozen tents were set up in a square named after a university student who fought against fascist rule during the Second World War. Some of the tents were decorated with Palestinian flags and banners reading ‘Student Intifada’.

Protest at Macron’s university

Student groups in Paris have called for a rally in solidarity with the Palestinians on Tuesday.

On Friday, French police ‘peacefully’ removed dozens of students who had gathered in support of the Palestinians at the Paris Institute of Political Studies, known as Sciences Po.

On Tuesday, students from the prestigious institute, whose alumni include French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal and President Emmanuel Macron, were seen entering the campus freely to take exams as police waited at the entrances.

Protests were also held at several other universities in France last week, including in Lille and Lyon. Macron’s office said police had been asked to remove students from 23 areas on French campuses.

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