Senator presses Army over backpay, religious freedoms for soldiers discharged for COVID vaccine refusal

From WWW.FOXNEWS.COM

Sen. Eric Schmitt, R-Mo., is pressing the U. S. Army for answers on behalf of former service members who were discharged for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine.

Nearly 2,000 service members were let go from the military after refusing to take the COVID-19 vaccine. Amid recruitment troubles in 2023, the Army recently sent a letter to the discharged soldiers, telling them they have the option to now correct their characterization of discharge and rejoin the branch. The Army has said the letters were part of a congressionally-mandated process.

In a letter to Secretary of the Army Christine Wormuth on Tuesday, Schmitt asked whether any soldiers would receive backpay if they decide to re-enlist, if they would be reinstated to their rank held before discharge, and whether the religious freedoms of service members will be protected moving forward.

"These mandates certainly harmed our military’s readiness and tragically destroyed the careers of thousands of brave volunteers," the Republican Senator wrote in a letter obtained by Fox News Digital. "These members have faced negative implications for veterans benefits and employment outside of the military. It is likely that most of those former members will never return to the military and serve our nation."

The senator also asked whether the Army will make continuous effort to ask these particular members if they would like to rejoin the branch, after reports the Army was about 10,000 soldiers short of meeting its FY 2023 recruiting goals. In 2022, recruitments fell short by an even larger margin o 15,000.

Schmitt noted the branch has missed their recruitment goals, highlighting that "8,300 men and women across the entire military were discharged solely due to COVID-19 mandates. The Army discharged 1,881 soldiers, and only granted 191 exemptions out of 10,699 requests."... (Read more)

Submitted 242 days ago


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