UAE to make military service compulsory for men

    By IINA,

    Dubai : The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has begun the process of imposing mandatory military service for adult males to add “another layer to the national defense force,” the country’s prime minister announced on Sunday. The move appears aimed at least in part on feeding more Emirati nationals into the federation’s armed forces.

    UAE Vice President, Prime Minister and ruler of Dubai Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al-Maktoum, said on his official Twitter feed that male high school graduates between the ages of 18 to 30 will be required to serve nine months, while those without a high school diploma must serve two years under the draft legislation. Military service for female Emiratis would be voluntary. “The new law adds another layer to the national defense force to further protect our nation, secure its borders (and) preserve its achievements,” Sheikh Mohammed said on his official Twitter feed.

    In separate comments carried by state news agency WAM, he said “national service implants the values of allegiance, loyalty, discipline and sacrifice among youth.” Sheikh Mohammed is vice president and prime minister of the seven-state United Arab Emirates federation as well as the ruler of the emirate of Dubai. The UAE Cabinet has endorsed the draft law, which will now be considered by the Federal National Council, a largely advisory body. Emirati policymaking is dominated by the federal capital Abu Dhabi and the commercial hub of Dubai, and there is unlikely to be little public opposition to the plans in the OPEC member nation, The Associated Press reported.

    “This did come out of the blue, but for a very good reason. The situation in the country demands manpower … based solely on Emirati nationals,” Theodore Karasik, a security and political affairs analyst at the Dubai-based Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis said. The UAE military currently has an estimated 51,000 active-duty personnel, according to the International Institute for Strategic Studies. Much of its military posture is aimed at deterring potential threats from nearby Iran despite longstanding trade and cultural links between the two neighbors.

    The UAE military also has sent troops overseas, including as part of the NATO-led mission to Afghanistan and to provide humanitarian relief to Pakistan. Karasik said the military conscription policy is unlikely to be directly aimed at bolstering the armed forces to confront threats from nearby Iran, but is rather “purely an Emirati issue.”