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5 key jobs which will avoid conscription call up if WW3 breaks out

If World War 3 breaks out, these jobs could be spared from having to go to the front line to fight.

Freedom Parade For Soldiers Returning From Afghanistan

British people could be forced to join the army if WW3 breaks out (Image: Getty)

Suddenly, the world is once again gripped by escalating conflict. Missile strikes in Cyprus and Dubai, coupled with US bombings across Iran, have ramped up the stakes once more. At the same time, Putin is hammering the West with nuclear threats and has taken Iran’s side, and even the UK has offered its air bases for the US to use for its attacks.

The prospect of WW3 is not something that anyone relishes, but as global tensions spill over, it feels as though a global conflict has never been closer. But if WW3 does break out, there may be some jobs deemed too vital to national security to be made to fight, so these key vocations could be spared conscription to the front lines or the war effort.

Tensions have ramped up since the US marched into Venezuela and began making fresh noises about taking Greenland, stating “US military is always an option” just this week. Meanwhile, Sir Keir Starmer has promised to put British troops in Ukraine.

Just a few months back, Lib Dem MP Mike Martin told the Express that conscription “will happen” if the UK goes to war with Russia.

We don’t know exactly what conscription would look like today, but we do have some historic precedent from the last global conflict, WW2. And in WW2, there were some key jobs that were deemed too important to be conscripted. Those in key industries were spared conscription – bakers, farmers, doctors or nurses and engineers in particular.

Those who objected to fighting, known as ‘conscientious objectors’, were sent to tribunals and then made to work non-combatant jobs that helped the war in other wars. In WW2, conscription began for men aged between 20 to 22 in 1939, up to six months before the war actually broke out.

The UK Parliament website says: “During the spring of 1939 the deteriorating international situation forced the British government under Neville Chamberlain to consider preparations for a possible war against Nazi Germany.

“Plans for limited conscription applying to single men aged between 20 and 22 were given parliamentary approval in the Military Training Act in May 1939. This required men to undertake six months’ military training, and some 240,000 registered for service.”

But when war was declared, the age range was immediately widened to any man aged 18 to 41.

It continues: “On the day Britain declared war on Germany, 3 September 1939, Parliament immediately passed a more wide-reaching measure.

“The National Service (Armed Forces) Act imposed conscription on all males aged between 18 and 41 who had to register for service. Those medically unfit were exempted, as were others in key industries and jobs such as baking, farming, medicine, and engineering.”

By the end of 1941, women and ‘all childless widows’ between the ages of 20 and 30 were called up, while men aged up to 51 were called up for military service. Even those aged 52 to 60 were required to take part in ‘some form of military service’.

It added: “The main reason was that there were not enough men volunteering for police and civilian defence work, or women for the auxiliary units of the armed forces.”

Mike Martin, an Afghanistan veteran and the MP for Tunbridge Wells, told the Express: “There’s a significant chance that it [war with Russia] might happen so we must be prepared.

“Obviously, if we get involved in a general war with Russia, we’ll be conscripting the population – there’s no question about that,” the Liberal Democrat added.

“Being prepared generates deterrence, which decreases the likelihood [of war]. The whole point about building the military up is it decreases the likelihood of this happening. I think that’s an important caveat. I’ve fought in wars, I’m not a warmonger. But I recognise that you’ve got to [pursue] peace through strength.”

The Iranian Red Crescent Society said the US-Israeli air strike campaign has killed 555 people so far in Iran so far.

As the American and Israeli air strikes continued, top Iranian security official Ali Larijani vowed on X that “we will not negotiate with the United States”.

In Iraq, a pro-Iranian militia claimed responsibility for a drone attack targeting US troops at Baghdad airport, the day after it said it fired at an American base in the city of Irbil in the north.

Cyprus said a drone attack targeted a British base on the Mediterranean island nation.

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