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Germany Wants Recruits. But ‘No One Wants Their Children in the Army.’

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Given the country’s past, cultural resistance to becoming a soldier is high. Can leaders change minds to meet a changing world?

A person with VR goggles looks up as a man in a suit at a stall in an exhibition hall smiles at him. Soldiers in green fatigues are behind, and there are panels with military slogans in German.
Trying out a virtual reality headset at a German Army recruitment booth during a tech trade show in Berlin in May. Germany has committed to significantly expand its military.Credit...Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

Clay Risen

By Clay Risen

Reporting from Berlin and Rüthen, Germany

June 26, 2025Updated 10:42 a.m. ET

On a rain-soaked morning in late May, dozens of parents gathered on the outskirts of Rüthen, a small town in western Germany, to watch their children race go-karts around a slalom track.

Behind them, flanked by two olive-drab supply trucks, stood a contingent of recruiters from the German Army. In between races, the children climbed around the vehicles, followed by recruiters eagerly gauging their interest in one day joining their ranks.

The children smiled. Many parents did not.

“I think it’s terrible that they advertise to kids,” said Manuel Fleigner, a civil servant. “No one wants their children in the army.”

Germany has long sought to extinguish the militarism that fueled its calamitous history during World War II. But now, facing a growing threat from Russia and the prospect of reduced American support, the government is desperate to change that. It is finding the challenge formidable.

In a survey in June by the Forsa Institute, only 17 percent of Germans said they would defend their country if attacked.

“Younger people don’t really see the purpose of why they should put their lives at risk for Germany,” said Aylin Matlé, a fellow at the German Council on Foreign Relations.


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