France launches recruitment campaign for new voluntary military service


Admiral Nicolas Vaujour, Chief of Staff of the French Navy, Chief of Defence Staff of the French Armed Forces Fabien Mandon, French Defence and Veterans Minister Catherine Vautrin, General Pierre Schill, Chief of Staff of the Army, and Chief of Staff of the French Air and Space Force Jerome Bellanger attend a press conference to present the launch of the French national service recruitment campaign, in Paris, France, January 12, 2026. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

PARIS, Jan 12 (Reuters) - France ‌said on Monday it was launching a campaign to ‌recruit thousands of young people for a new 10-month ‌voluntary national military service, with the first participants starting their service in September.

The scheme, unveiled by President Emmanuel Macron in November, is open to all young ‍French citizens aged 18-25 eager "to play a ‍part in the nation's capacity ‌to resist in an uncertain environment," the chief of staff of ‍the ​armed forces, General Fabien Mandon told a press conference.

The move is part of a broader shift across Europe, ⁠where nations that for decades have had U.S. ‌security guarantees are fretting about President Donald Trump's shifting priorities and what they see ⁠as Russia's ‍aggressive posture.

From September, 3,000 young people will join either the army, navy or air force for missions on French soil, rising to 4,000 ‍in 2027 and 10,000 annually by 2030.

They ‌will receive about 800 euros ($935) a month and conduct tasks ranging from assistance during natural disasters to surveillance against terrorism, and serve in jobs ranging from drone operator to baker, mechanic, electrician and member of medical staff.

After the program, participants could integrate into civilian life, become a reservist, or stay in the armed forces, ‌reflecting the "long-term evolution of the army toward a hybrid model," Defense Minister Catherine Vautrin told the same news conference.

The scheme is expected to cost ​150 million euros in 2026 and a total of 2.3 billion euros between 2026-2030, she said.

($1 = 0.8556 euros)

(Reporting by Dominique Vidalon; Editing by Aidan Lewis)

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