German Men Now Need Military Permission to Leave the Country — And Europe Is Treating It Like Fine Print
A sweeping wave of conscription revivals is reshaping Europe's social contract, with Germany implementing legislation in January 2026 that requires male citizens between 17 and 45 to obtain Bundeswehr approval before residing abroad for more than three months. This policy represents the resurrection of a dormant 1965 Cold War provision, introduced quietly within a broader military modernization bill and only surfacing in public debate in April — a full three months after it took effect. The pan-European pattern is unmistakable: Croatia reinstated mandatory service for those aged 19 to 29, France is preparing a 10-month voluntary training program slated for mid-2026, and Denmark extended conscription to women starting the same year, while Sweden and Lithuania had already revived their draft systems. Driven by the perceived existential threat of Russia's sustained ground war in Ukraine, these policies represent a fundamental reorientation of European security doctrine after three decades of post-Cold War demilitarization. This analysis examines the structural origins, democratic legitimacy, gender equity contradictions, and long-term societal consequences of Europe's conscription revival, ultimately arguing that sacrificing civil liberties in the name of security risks eroding the very foundations of the societies these policies claim to protect.