Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Judge blocks Navy from acting against sailors

- Robert Burns

WASHINGTON – A federal judge in Texas granted a preliminar­y injunction stopping the Navy from acting against 35 sailors for refusing on religious grounds to comply with an order to get vaccinated against COVID-19.

The injunction is a new challenge to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s decision to make vaccinatio­ns mandatory for all members of the military. The vaccinatio­n requiremen­t allows for exemptions on religious and other grounds, but none of the thousands of requests for religious waivers so far have been granted.

There was no indication that the order would affect service members beyond the 35 sailors who sued Austin and the Navy. The Pentagon had no immediate response to a request for comment.

Well over 90% of the military has been fully vaccinated against COVID-19, including at least 98.5% of active and reserve members of the Navy. Austin asserts that vaccines are a valid and necessary medical requiremen­t.

In his decision Monday, U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor wrote that the Navy’s process for considerin­g a sailor’s request for a religious exemption is flawed and amounts to “theater.”

O’Connor, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, wrote that the group of 35 sailors who sued the government in November and sought a preliminar­y injunction against the Navy have a right on religious and First Amendment grounds to refuse the vaccinatio­n order.

“The Navy servicemem­bers in this case seek to vindicate the very freedoms they have sacrificed so much to protect,” O’Connor wrote. “The COVID-19 pandemic provides the government no license to abrogate those freedoms. There is no COVID-19 exception to the First Amendment. There is no military exclusion from our Constituti­on.”

Without commenting on the case in Texas, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby last month defended the validity of the military service’s processes for considerin­g religious exemptions.

“Each exemption asked for on religious grounds is evaluated by a chaplain, by a chain of command, by medical experts and is given quite a lot of thought, and they’re all decided case by case individual­ly,” he said Dec. 21. In his decision in favor of the injunction sought by the 35 Navy sailors, O’Connor wrote that they objected to being vaccinated on four grounds: “opposition to abortion and the use of aborted fetal cell lines in developmen­t of the vaccine; belief that modifying one’s body is an affront to the Creator; divine instructio­n not to receive the vaccine, and opposition to injecting trace amounts of animal cells into one’s body.”

“Plaintiffs’ beliefs about the vaccine are undisputed­ly sincere, and it is not the role of this court to determine their truthfulne­ss or accuracy,” the judge wrote.

The sailors who sued are members of the Naval Special Warfare Command, including SEALs.

In the early stages of the pandemic, the Navy struggled with one particular­ly critical COVID-19 outbreak. Hundreds of sailors aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier were infected, starting in late March while on a deployment to Vietnam and elsewhere in Asia. The ship was taken out of operation at Guam.

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Austin

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