Alex said:
They don't even get the two weeks training. Family of conscripted Russians report they get one day of orientation, just enough to show how to load a gun, and are then send of to the front. No way they get any training when they're there except while under fire. Putin is in total panic, and he will drag all of Russia with him.
You are mixing conscription - which is in place in Russia but not in NL I believe - with mobilisation that was just announced.
These two are entirely different things.
I presume you are not familiar with the Russian context here /their setup was the same at my place just 2 decades ago/:
Conscription means the duty of every adult man to "serve the state" in military for a given period of time. That is the general and historical meaning.
Today most militaries which use conscription have a professional contract force and the conscripts fill in only service roles in peace time. In such a military,
unlike in the Conscripted militaries of old, the primary objective of the time a conscript is serving his term is NOT to fight, but to train for a potential future (!) mobilisation AFTER his term has ended.
What this means in practice is that in such a "hybrid" model the "new" conscripts are sent to fight as THE LAST ONES in case of mobilisation as they are still in "training". Lets put aside now how effective a 1-year training is.
The first to be mobilised are the LAST YEAR's conscripts as those have their training "fresh". Basically such conscripts are immediately mobilised into the regular army after their conscription term (and their ends-year training) ends.
There are more subtleties but that is the main point ref. conscription which you referred in error here.
Ref. the folks actually being sent to combat, those are already partially-trained men - after the 1-year training they got during mandatory conscription term.
Depending on when a mobilised person had their mandatory conscription term, such a man would be either sent to a "refreshed" quick course where "what is new since" and "lets repeat what you learned in past" is run over quickly.
When a specific person is fresh from completing his conscription term /aka his training/, i.e. within a few montsh/years, such a person may not be sent for a refresher as there is no point - the person just came from a 1-year training after all.
This is where the story youread about is possibly true - a mobilised conscript may be sent almost directly to his unit IF he is young and had completed his training very recently. But where you are wrong is in assuming that is something unusual or "wrong". It is actually the normal working of a universal mandatory service military organization.
Nothing bad or good about it. It is just what andatory military service is about - to provide the state a readily-available pool of TRAINED personnel. The idea there is that 10 1-year trained men are more valuable than 1 professional soldier who could be funded in their place.
We may argue if the mandatory service concept has its place in wars of today - I would argue the current conflict is a proof it has as Ukraine was ableto mobilise an almost million force from 200k just because of this - but that will not change the mechanics of it.
Hope helps.