Springfield News-Sun

3 Air Force cadets who refused vaccine won’t be commission­ed

- By Lolita C. Baldor

WASHINGTON — Three cadets at the U.S. Air Force Academy who have refused the COVID-19 vaccine will not be commission­ed as military officers but will graduate with bachelor’s degrees, the academy said Saturday.

Academy spokesman Dean Miller said that a fourth cadet, who had refused the vaccine until about a week ago, decided to be vaccinated and will graduate and become an Air Force officer.

Miller said that while the three will get a degree “they will not be commission­ed into the United States Air Force as long as they remain unvaccinat­ed.” He added that a decision on whether to require the three to reimburse the U.S. for education costs in lieu of service will be made by the secretary of the Air Force.

The Air Force is the only military academy, so far, where cadets are not being commission­ed due to vaccine refusal. All of the more than 1,000 Army cadets at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, graduated and were commission­ed as officers earlier in the day and all were vaccinated.

The Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, said that none of their Navy or Marine Corps seniors are being prevented from commission­ing due to vaccine refusals. That graduation is Friday, and the Air Force ceremony is Wednesday in Colorado. Ahead of that ceremony, the U.S. Air Force Academy Board conducted its standard review of whether this year’s class had met all graduation requiremen­ts on Friday.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, who is the scheduled speaker at the Air Force graduation,has made the COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns mandatory for service members, including those at the academies.

Military leaders have argued that troops for decades have been required to get as many as 17 vaccines in order to maintain the health of the force, particular­ly those deploying overseas. Students get a regimen of shots on their first day — such as measles, mumps and rubella — if they aren’t already vaccinated. And they routinely get flu shots.

Members of Congress, the military and the public have questioned if the exemption reviews by the military services have been fair. There have been lawsuits filed against the mandate, centering on the fact that very few service members have been granted religious exemptions from the shots.

Until the COVID-19 vaccine, very few military members sought religious exemptions to any vaccines.

Air Force Academy spokesman Lt. Col. Brian Maguire said all four cadets were told of the potential consequenc­es and met with the academy’s superinten­dent. And he noted that they still had time before graduation to change their minds — and one did.

The military said as many as 20,000 service members have asked for religious exemptions. Thousands have been denied.

About 99% of the active duty Navy and 98% of the Air Force, Marine Corps and Army have gotten at least one shot.

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