Compulsory military service is to end after 67 years, with the last military personnel conscripted under the system to be discharged on Wednesday next week.
Those enlisted under the compulsory system were required to serve for a year, but as the nation transitions toward an all-volunteer military system, men born after 1994 had to undergo only four months of training.
The government implemented the compulsory military system in 1951.
Photo: Aaron Tu, Taipei Times
Since 1954, most army personnel were required to serve for two years, while those in the navy, air force and a special army unit had to serve for three years.
In 1981, compulsory enlistment was changed to two years for all personnel.
The conscription period was further reduced in 1991, when the two-year requirement was changed to 1 year, 10 months.
In August that year, the government also introduced alternative military service.
From 2004 to 2007, the conscription period was reduced by two months every year and in 2008 cut to one year.
More than 780,000 men have completed one-year compulsory military service since July 2008, Ministry of National Defense data showed.
Even after the December 2013 reduction to four months for men born after 1994, men born before Dec. 31, 1993, were still required to complete one year of service.
Soldiers in the final batch are made up of 299 army personnel, 39 navy personnel, 41 marines and 33 air force personnel for a total of 412, the data showed.
National Taiwan University (NTU) yesterday said it disqualified a person from an entrance examination for using AI smart glasses to cheat, along with two others for making untruthful statements in their curriculum vitae. The three applicants were given null scores, Taiwan’s highest-ranked university said, calling on prospective students to be honest in the admissions process. NTU registrar Lee Hung-sen (李宏森) said that the cheating applicant wore a hat and thick-rimmed glasses to the second written exam for medical school, claiming that they felt cold. Suspicions were aroused when the applicant stared oddly at the test for long stretches while steadily bringing the paper
MILITARY ISSUES: A partisan divide between the Cabinet and the legislature ‘raised questions about Taiwan’s ability to adequately fund its defense,’ the report said Taiwan’s defense budget, military personnel numbers and resilience are challenges to its ability to meet national defense goals, the US Naval Institute said in a report published on Tuesday. In response to the perception of a growing military threat posed by China, Taiwan has embarked on an effort to enhance the capabilities needed to deter an attempt by Beijing to annex the nation by force, the institute said in the US Congressional Research Service report, titled Taiwan: Defense and Military Issues, which was filed on Thursday last week. Taiwan’s defense budget increased by about 7.5 percent from 2024 to last year, it
NOT JUST NUMBERS: What matters to intelligence work is crucial, reliable information, so even a few credible leads can be highly valuable to national security, a legislator said The National Security Bureau (NSB) yesterday said it has finished the establishment of an information-reporting channel for Chinese nationals, the aim of which is to broaden intelligence gathering on China’s political, military, economic and social developments. Chinese nationals can submit information on the Web page, https://report.nsb.gov.tw, the NSB said in a statement. The move aims to expand the bureau’s diverse intelligence sources and is pursuant to the National Intelligence Services Act (國家情報工作法), it said, adding that it referenced practices adopted by intelligence agencies in the US, the UK and Israel. An increasing number of people are approaching Taiwanese agencies to provide information, as
The “pearl chain” water project is nearing completion, President William Lai (賴清德) and Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰) said yesterday, adding that the initiative linking reservoirs would help secure water supplies for agriculture and semiconductor development. The “pearl chain” project, spearheaded by the Water Resources Agency, aims to create a network across Taiwan, facilitating water transfers between areas, optimizing water use and reinforcing regional resource management. The initiative is nearing completion and would link Taiwan’s reservoirs and dams into an integrated network, Lai said during the groundbreaking ceremony of the nation’s first semiconductor supply chain zone at the Pingtung section of the Southern