17 July 2026

Russia Expands Youth Militarization (Part One)

The Jamestown Foundation  |  Maksym Beznosiuk

Russia is expanding basic military training in schools for grades 6–11 starting September 1, 2026, to prepare students for military service and wartime jobs. This curriculum overhaul increases the military instruction component from 20 percent to 50 percent of the "Fundamentals of Homeland Security and Defense" class while integrating drone and artificial intelligence training.

To support this systemic shift, the Kremlin increased its 2026 budget for military-patriotic activities twentyfold since 2021 to approximately $910 million, with plans to reach $940 million by 2028. Alongside physical readiness assessments tied to army fitness, Moscow is introducing a mandatory "Spiritual and Moral Culture of Russia" class to shape youth worldviews using traditional values and military histories. Furthermore, the state-backed Internet Development Institute has allocated $300 million to patriotic digital content, including militarized video games like Gostomel Warriors, to normalize military violence and prepare youth for long-term confrontation with the West.

Comment
Long-term state survival in high-intensity attrition warfare requires deep societal mobilisation. Modern industrial conflicts demand a continuous pipeline of technically proficient recruits. Early exposure to unmanned systems creates a highly adaptable pool of future combatants. This systemic integration of civilian education with defence requirements will sustain prolonged military operations.

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