Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Europe's Next Defence Challenge: Military Mass


Europe's Next Defence Challenge: Military Mass

Europe is rebuilding its defence industry and increasing military spending.
The next question is whether it can rebuild the manpower and mobilisation systems needed to deter Russia.


Rebuilding Defence Capabilities

Since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Europe has undergone a remarkable strategic transformation.

Defence spending is rising across the continent. Ammunition production is expanding. New European defence-industrial initiatives have emerged. NATO allies are increasing force readiness, and governments that once spoke cautiously about defence now openly discuss deterrence and rearmament.

Europe is rearming at speed. Yet beneath this visible transformation lies a less discussed question. If deterrence were ever tested, could Europe generate sufficient military mass?

Europe's defence debate has largely focused on budgets, weapons systems and industrial production. These are essential components of military power.
But wars are ultimately fought by people. Military capability depends not only on equipment, but also on the ability to recruit, train, mobilise and sustain large numbers of personnel over time.

As Europe rebuilds its armed forces, military manpower may become the next major strategic challenge.

Measuring Military Potential

Army size alone provides an incomplete picture of military strength.

To understand Europe's manpower position and developments, three factors matter.

The first is current Military Personnel Capacity (MPC): the military manpower available today through active personnel, trained reserves, conscripts and territorial defence structures.
The second is the Military Personnel Reinforcement Index (MPRI): the current degree to which a country has expanded military manpower since 2020 through measures such as conscription, reserve growth, recruitment initiatives and force expansion.
The third is Mobilisation Readiness (MR): the ability to transform additional citizens into operational military capability. This includes reserve systems, mobilisation plans, training structures, civil defence arrangements and national preparedness.

Together these factors form what might be called a European Military Manpower Potential Index (EMMPI).

The distinction is important.

A country may possess substantial military manpower today but be expanding only slowly. Another may have a smaller force but be rapidly strengthening recruitment, reserves and mobilisation systems.

Military power is not simply about how many personnel exist today. It is also about how rapidly manpower can be expanded and how effectively additional citizens can be transformed into military capability.

Table 1. European Military Manpower Potential (EMMPI) – Illustrative Assessment 2026

Country

MPC (Current Capacity)

MPRI (Growth Since 2020)

MR (Mobilisation Readiness)

Overall Assessment

Poland

High

Very High

High

Very High

Finland

Medium

Very High

Very High

Very High

Estonia

Low

Very High

Very High

High

Lithuania

Low-Medium

Very High

High

High

Latvia

Low

Very High

High

High

Sweden

Medium

High

High

High

Denmark

Medium-Low

High

Medium-High

Medium-High

Germany

High

High

Medium

High

France

High

Medium-High

Medium

High

Romania

Medium

Medium

Medium

Medium

Netherlands

Medium

Medium

Low-Medium

Medium

Italy

High

Low-Medium

Low-Medium

Medium

Spain

High

Low

Low

Medium-Low

Russia

Very High

High

Very High

Very High

EMMPI combines Military Personnel Capacity (MPC), Military Personnel Reinforcement Index (MPRI), and Mobilisation Readiness (MR). Scores are qualitative assessments intended to compare strategic trends rather than exact force numbers.
Sources used: Assessment based on NATO and EDA defence data, national defence ministry publications, official force-development plans, reserve-force expansion programmes, conscription reforms, mobilisation policies, and military manpower targets announced by European governments and Russia between 2020 and 2026.

Table 2. The Three Europes

Group

Countries

Characteristics

Mobilisation Europe

Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Sweden, Denmark

Expanding conscription, strengthening reserves, investing in civil defence and mobilisation systems

Latent Power Europe

Germany, France

Large manpower capacity and economic strength, but mobilisation systems still rebuilding

Low-Mobilisation Europe

Spain, Italy, Belgium, Portugal and others

Significant economic and military potential, but manpower mobilisation remains a lower strategic priority


Table 3. Europe versus Russia

Factor

European Union

Russia

Population Base

Superior

Inferior

Economic Base

Superior

Inferior

Industrial Potential

Superior

Inferior

Current Military Personnel Capacity

Comparable

Comparable

Military Personnel Reinforcement Trend

Improving

High

Mobilisation Readiness

Uneven

Strong

Strategic Challenge

Organisation and integration

Long-term sustainment

The tables above reveal an important pattern. Europe's challenge is not a shortage of people, wealth or industrial potential. Instead, the continent displays significant variation in its ability to mobilise military manpower. Some countries are rebuilding mobilisation systems rapidly, others possess enormous latent potential, while a third group remains focused primarily on spending and equipment rather than manpower generation.

Viewed through this lens, Europe increasingly appears divided into three distinct manpower models.

Three Europes Are Emerging

Mobilisation Europe

The first group consists of countries that have made military manpower a central element of their security strategy.
Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Sweden and Denmark fall broadly into this category.
These countries are expanding conscription systems, strengthening reserves, investing in civil defence and rebuilding mobilisation structures. For them, military preparedness is not an abstract policy objective. It is a practical requirement shaped by geography and proximity to Russia.

Poland has embarked on one of Europe's most ambitious military expansion programmes. Finland continues to maintain one of the continent's most robust reserve-based defence models.
The Baltic states have moved rapidly to strengthen manpower systems that were often neglected during the post-Cold War period.

These countries increasingly think in terms of mobilisation.

Latent Power Europe

A second group consists of countries with enormous potential but more limited mobilisation traditions.
Germany and France are the most important examples.
Both possess large populations, strong economies and significant defence-industrial capacity. Both are increasing defence spending and expanding military ambitions.

Yet their challenge is different.
Their military potential is enormous, but much of it remains latent. The institutions, reserve structures and mobilisation culture required to rapidly generate military mass are less developed than in many Nordic and Baltic states.

Germany's efforts to rebuild military personnel and reserves may ultimately become one of the most consequential developments in European defence.
France is pursuing reserve expansion and new forms of voluntary military service.

Neither country lacks potential. The question is how quickly that potential can be converted into usable capability.

Low-Mobilisation Europe

A third group consists of countries where military manpower has not yet become a major strategic priority. This includes much of Western and Southern Europe.

Countries such as Spain, Italy, Belgium and Portugal possess significant economic resources and important armed forces. Yet compared with the Nordic, Baltic and Polish models, manpower mobilisation has generally advanced more slowly.
This is not necessarily a criticism. Security environments differ, and governments face different strategic priorities.
However, it does suggest that Europe's defence transformation remains uneven.

What Russia Understands

Russia's war against Ukraine has demonstrated many weaknesses in the Russian system.
It has also highlighted something that Europe often overlooks.
Military power is not merely a matter of spending. Russia continues to think in terms of mobilisation.
Its defence system integrates active forces, reserves, industrial production and state structures into a broader capacity to generate military mass. Years of war have reinforced this orientation.
Russia's economy remains smaller than Europe's. Its technological base is narrower. Its demographic challenges are significant.

Yet Russia retains an important advantage: a stronger mobilisation culture and a greater institutional familiarity with generating large-scale military manpower.
This does not make Russia stronger overall. But it does highlight an area where Europe still has work to do.

Europe's Real Advantage

The encouraging reality is that Europe possesses extraordinary strengths.

The European Union's population is roughly three times larger than Russia's.
Europe's economy is vastly larger.
Its technological base is broader.
Its long-term industrial potential is greater.

In other words, Europe does not fundamentally suffer from a shortage of people, wealth or productive capacity.
The challenge is organisational.

Europe's strategic question is therefore not whether it can match Russia's manpower potential.
It almost certainly can.

The question is whether it can organise, train and mobilise that potential effectively enough to sustain credible integrated deterrence.

The Missing Piece: Mobilisation Readiness

This is where the debate increasingly shifts.

The issue is no longer simply how many tanks Europe can buy or how many artillery shells it can produce. The issue is how quickly Europe can generate military capability when required.

Mobilisation readiness depends on institutions.

  • It depends on reserve systems.
  • It depends on training capacity.
  • It depends on civil defence structures.
  • It depends on public preparedness and political willingness.

Many of the countries making the greatest progress in this area are not necessarily the largest. Finland's influence on European defence thinking today stems not from population size, but from its ability to mobilise society for national defence. Similar lessons can be found across the Baltic region.

The challenge for larger European states may therefore be less about spending and more about rebuilding the machinery of mobilisation itself.

Conclusion

Europe's defence rebuild is real.

The continent is spending more, producing more and preparing more than at any point since the Cold War. Yet deterrence requires more than budgets and factories. 

It requires people. Europe has the people.
The challenge is rebuilding the institutions capable of turning those people into military capability.
If it fails, the continent may discover that weapons alone are not enough.

That may be the most important defence question Europe faces in the decade ahead.