"Russia Will Not Become Friendlier After Ukraine War Ends," Warns Czech Military Chief
Prague Morning

Chief of General Staff expresses need to boost numbers in the Czech military, despite demographic trends.
Russia should not be expected to become โfriendlierโ after the Ukraine war comes to an end, according to the Czech Republic military chief.
โRussia will stay here. Russia will not be safer towards us, it will not be friendlier and it will not be more predictable,โ Chief of General Staff Karel Rehka said in weekend remarks to Czech television.
His remarks came days before the war reached its third anniversary and with talk of possible negotiations and peace proposals making headlines.
Rehka also pointed to the difficulty of achieving a resolution to the war in a way that prevents it from resurfacing in the future.
He added that his countryโs military hopes to boost its active and reserve members to 37,500 but admitted that this is โunrealisticโ given demographic trends and past recruitment efforts.
Under current plans, the Czech army is set to have 30,000 professional soldiers and 10,000 active reserve members by 2030.
Currently, the army has some 23,600 soldiers, with around 1,000 added over the past five years.
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