Didn't they just draft reservists today.
No. Reserve troops get deployed all the time. It's called being activated, not being drafted. It's common practice. That's why they exist. It doesn't mean anything in regards to an actual draft.
ETA:
However, the services are NOT currently doing well with meeting their recruiting numbers, at least the Marines are not. They have struggled all of last year and the struggle continues today. It's a big problem. They don't know how to get kids motivated to join.
In recent years, they did away with the 20 year retirement plan and restructured it so its more like a civilian job with a 401k and company match. It pays out less after a 20 year career but it also allows people to build up a larger portfolio (if they contribute enough, that is). I think that has caused a lot of people to reconsider, given that military pay isn't as high as comparable civilian careers, especially on the enlisted side.
Officers, after about 10 years, get paid handsomely. My husband is an 0-5 with 23 years of service and his "real world equivalent salary" (taking into account tax benefits) is $190,000. When he retires next year, considering the VA disability he will surely qualify for because of how broken he is, he will be looking at a six figure guaranteed monthly income, with annual COL adjustments, for the rest of his life, just for waking up in the morning. It's a lucrative career if you go in right out of college (that they pay for) as an officer. He will be 44, and plans to move right into a second career in the civilian corporate sector, where he will likely make another six figures. Or, he can get another federal or state government job and retire with a second pension in 20 more years. It's a good deal financially, but there are very real costs. His mental and physical health has suffered immensely and he has some issues that you don't commonly find in people until they reach their 70s. It's definitely a trade off.