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On Wednesday, Rep. Chip Roy (TX-21) joined Rep. Mike Johnson (LA-04) and Rep. Thomas Massie (KY-04) in demanding transparency from the Pentagon on how the military’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate is affecting military readiness.

Their letter to Department of Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin comes amid the Pentagon’s historic failure to meet recruiting goals and subsequent lowering of recruitment standards. Despite this recruiting crisis, the military is set to discharge over 75,000 soldiers for refusing to take the COVID-19 vaccine.

“The Department of Defense’s Covid vaccine mandate is deleterious to readiness and the military’s ability to fight and win wars,” their letter reads. “We clearly see your vaccine mandate as the primary cause of the Department’s recruiting difficulties.”

Rep. Roy and his colleagues urged the Pentagon to immediately revoke their Covid-19 vaccine mandate for servicemembers, civilian personnel, and contractors, and reinstate those who have already been discharged over it. They asked the Pentagon to release data on the number of unvaccinated soldiers and vaccine exemptions granted, and how the Pentagon’s vaccine mandate will affect future military recruiting efforts.

Rep. Roy had the following to say about the letter:

“Joe Biden’s message to young, healthy American patriots is clear: unless you submit to taking a politicized, ineffective COVID-19 vaccine, you cannot serve in the Armed Forces. Through their tyrannical military vaccine mandate, this Administration is intentionally forcing out thousands of the brave men and women who sacrifice to serve our country. This de facto ideological purge will continue to undermine our military readiness for years to come.”

Rep. Johnson had the following to say about the letter:

“The Biden Administration’s military vaccine mandate is clearly harming military readiness by creating unnecessary recruiting and retention shortfalls. And now, after the Pentagon has tried, and failed, to make up the difference by lowering recruitment standards, over 125,000 active servicemembers—who taxpayers paid to train—face discharge during the worst recruiting year in our military’s history, over an illness that is extremely unlikely to have any significant effect on our servicemembers. Until the Secretary of Defense withdraws this disastrous mandate, or begins rapidly granting more exemptions, the readiness and professionalism of our Armed Forces will suffer.”

Rep. Massie had the following to say about the letter:

“Telling servicemembers they can apply for religious exemptions from COVID vaccine mandates while denying almost all requests received is fraud. Our letter asks the Department of Defense (DOD) to provide the data needed to determine if the DOD is perpetuating this fraud on our military personnel. A policy of blanket denials is unjust, especially when the COVID shots forced on the military by the Secretary of Defense were not FDA approved as is legally required for any compulsory vaccine.”

Full text of the letter can be found below and at the link here.

Dear Secretary Austin,

We write to express our grave concern over the effect of the Department of Defense’s Covid-19 vaccine mandate on the readiness of our Armed Forces, particularly the U.S. Army. As a result of your mandate, eight percent of the Army’s approximately 1 million soldiers face expulsion, Army recruiters cannot meet their FY22 target, and the Army has cut its projected FY23 end-strength by 12,000 soldiers.  As a major land war rages in Europe our own military faces a self-imposed readiness crisis.

Based on the sparse data published by the Department of Army, at least 40,000 National Guardsmen, 20,000 Army Reservists, and at least 15,000 Active Army Soldiers have yet to receive a Covid-vaccine and now face discharge.  The Department of Defense’s own Covid response page indicates that approximately 900,000 soldiers are fully vaccinated out of the 1 million soldiers in the Army, Army Reserve, and Army National Guard.  However, during July testimony before the House Armed Services Committee, the Vice Chief of Staff of the Army claimed that fewer than 20,000 soldiers were unvaccinated.  The Army has not published updated data for months. The opaqueness of the Department continues to frustrate Members of Congress attempting to perform oversight of the Executive Branch. Our repeated inquiries remain unanswered.

We are not the only ones frustrated. Thousands of these servicemembers have been left in limbo while they wait for the adjudication of religious and medical exemptions. Some have waited for nearly a year to learn if they will be forcibly discharged for their sincerely held religious beliefs or medical concerns. Most, if not all, of the small number of approved exemptions to date have gone to servicemembers in the process of leaving the Army.  Furthermore, according to current Army policy, even those few soldiers who receive permanent exemptions will be treated as second class soldiers for the rest of their careers— each of them requires approval from the Undersecretary of the Army to travel, change assignments, or even attend training courses away from their home station. The Department has abused the trust and good faith of loyal servicemembers by handling vaccine exemptions in a sluggish and disingenuous manner.

If 75,000 soldiers are discharged, it begs the question whether the Army will be able to replace them. As indicated in a House Armed Services Readiness Subcommittee hearing in July, the Army will need to make additional cuts in its end-strength, particularly in the Reserve Components, and it will have significant gaps in its operational capabilities.

At the very end of the fiscal year, the Army has only met 52% of its FY22 recruiting goal.  How will it recruit another 75,000 troops beyond its annual target to account for vaccine-related discharges? Earlier this summer, the service began accepting enlistees without high school degrees or GEDs, offering $35,000 to any enlistee willing to go to basic training within 45 days, removing tattoo policies, and allowing soldiers to pick their first duty station. We are not at war, but the Army is reducing basic standards and offering enlistment incentives greater than or equal to those during the height of the War on Terror–with poorer results.

We clearly see your vaccine mandate as the primary cause of the Department’s recruiting difficulties. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, over forty percent of men aged 18-24 years old have refused vaccination for Covid-19.  In the Southern United States, an area responsible for half of the nation’s enlistments, that number is over fifty percent.  Off the bat, your vaccine mandate disqualifies more than forty percent of the Army’s target demographic from service nationwide, and over half of the individuals in the most fertile recruiting grounds.

In the past, you have insisted the Covid-19 vaccine mandate is an imperative for readiness, but increasing amounts of data raise legitimate questions about your assertion. Servicemembers under 40 years of age without comorbidities have nearly no chance of death from the virus, and study after study has shown that covid vaccinations have negligible or even negative efficacy against the Omicron strains.  We also know that natural immunity provides better protection against infection and death than existing Covid vaccines, yet the Department still refuses to recognize it in lieu of vaccination.

The data is now clear. The Department of Defense’s Covid vaccine mandate is deleterious to readiness and the military’s ability to fight and win wars. The vaccine provides negligible benefit to the young, fit members of our Armed Forces, and the mandate’s imposition is clearly affecting the Department’s ability to sustain combat formations and recruit future talent. We urge you to immediately revoke your Covid-19 vaccine mandate for all servicemembers, civilian personnel, and contractors and re-instate those who have already been discharged. Furthermore, we request the following information:

  • How many soldiers remain unvaccinated by component, military occupational specialty (MOS), and years of service?
  • How many soldiers have filed for religious, medical, and administrative exemptions?
  • How many religious, medical, and administrative exemptions have been granted?
  • How many airmen, sailors, and marines remain unvaccinated by component and Air Force Specialty Code (AFSC)/Rate/MOS?
  • How much will it cost the Department to recruit, train, and PCS replacements for the soldiers facing expulsion for their failure to comply with the vaccine mandate?
  • If all remaining unvaccinated soldiers are discharged and the Army continues recruiting at the same rate through the end of this fiscal year, what will be the projected FY23 end strengths of the Army, Army National Guard, and Army Reserve in six months?

Author: Press Release

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