Mar 28, 2025

Poll: Only 6% of Czechs Would Join Military if Country was Attacked

A new survey reveals that nearly half of Czech citizens believe current defense spending at 2 percent of GDP is sufficient, and only a small fraction would volunteer to join the military if Czechia or a NATO ally were attacked.

The poll, conducted last month by the Median agency for Czech Radio, found that half of the respondents were content with the current level of investment in defense, one third of people wanted to increase spending above NATOโ€™s minimum threshold of 2 percent, while a quarter of those asked backed a reduction in spending.

The findings come just weeks after the Czech government announced plans to increase defense spending to at least 3 percent of GDP by 2030, a move Prime Minister Petr Fiala has described as both necessary and urgent.

The Chamber of Deputies is set to debate the nationโ€™s defense capability this week, with President Petr Pavel scheduled to address an extraordinary session on the topic.

โ€œTwo percent is the minimum today, but not all states even meet that. We need to discuss whether higher spending is necessary and feasible,โ€ Fiala said. He also highlighted the economic benefits of defense investment, including domestic industrial growth, innovation, and technological development.

โ€œRegardless of whether Donald Trump or someone else would win in America, the readiness of the U.S. to provide the complete defense of Europe is decreasing,โ€ Fiala said in January. โ€œThatโ€™s enough to watch the internal social debate in the United States, and thatโ€™s why itโ€™s in our interest to take care of our defense.โ€

However, while Czech citizens may be divided on how much to invest in the sector, their views on joining the military in the face of an attack are more cohesive.

Should the country or one of its NATO allies be attacked โ€” and thus the allianceโ€™s collective defense principle be triggered โ€” four in five respondents (80 percent) ruled out the notion of volunteering to join the military, with 54 percent point-blank refusing and 26 percent suggesting they would โ€œrather not.โ€

In contrast, just 6 percent said they would definitely sign up to defend the country from attack, while 14 percent said they would consider it.

Furthermore, those within the Czech army are aging, with data from the countryโ€™s defense ministry revealing the average age is now 37 and a half years โ€” up by one and a half years since 2018.

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