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Jordan Restores Mandatory Conscription After 34 Years

Officials say a phased plan will draft up to 10,000 young Jordanians under military and theoretical tracks with a full implementation schedule due early next year.

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Overview

  • Crown Prince Hussein bin Abdullah II declared the revival of national military service at a gathering in Irbid, marking the first mandatory conscription since its abolition in 1991.
  • Government spokesperson Mohammad Momani outlined a phased intake beginning with 6,000 recruits born in 2007 or turning 18 by January and increasing to 10,000 in the initial rollout.
  • The program will feature a predominant military track alongside a theoretical track with exemptions limited to legal allowances such as only sons and medical unfitness, though full details remain unpublished.
  • Officials plan to launch the service early next year with a timetable that will specify its duration and long-term recruitment targets.
  • The policy is presented as a bolster to national defense against regional instability and potential Palestinian displacement even as Jordan balances its US security partnership, peace-treaty obligations with Israel and a crackdown on pro-Palestine dissent.