40,000 Army National Guard Troops Face Pay Loss, Discharge as COVID Vaccine Deadline Kicks In

40,000 Army National Guard Troops Face Pay Loss, Discharge as COVID Vaccine Deadline Kicks In
National Guard members assisting in hospitals with COVID-19-related patients in Northeast Ohio have been shifted to some throughout Southwest Ohio, effective Jan. 26. Ohio National Guard
Bill Pan
Updated:
0:00

Nearly 40,000 troops in the U.S. Army National Guard who have rejected COVID-19 vaccine shots are set to face penalties after the vaccination deadline passed on Thursday at midnight.

Army National Guard and Air National Guard members were mandated by the Defense Department to be fully vaccinated by the deadlines set by each military branch. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin warned last August that those who refuse to comply would be unable to participate in drills, get paid, or put their service days toward their retirement.

“Unless there is an approved exemption, National Guardsmen who refuse to get the shots face repercussions and consequences. This includes loss of pay or the loss of the ability to train,” the Pentagon declared in December. “Those who persist in failing to obey a lawful order face discharge.”

As of Monday, approximately 88.6 percent of the roughly 336,000-member strong Army National Guard have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, according to the National Guard. This means more than 38,000 Guard troops have not been vaccinated and, as a result, are subject to potential expulsion.

“We’re going to give every soldier every opportunity to get vaccinated and continue their military career,” Lt. Gen. Jon Jensen, director of the Army National Guard, said in a statement. “We’re not giving up on anybody until the separation paperwork is signed and completed.”

The Pentagon has made it clear that the federal government won’t pay unvaccinated Guard members after the deadline, meaning that they won’t be paid when performing federal missions, such as certain assignments to the nation’s southern border, if they are allowed to participate at all.

That being said, unvaccinated National Guardsmen might still get paid by their states in the performance of their state-assigned duties, depending on the state.

For example, in Texas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott explicitly ordered to not punish any Texan Guardsman for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine, adding that as long as he remains the commander-in-chief of the Texas National Guard, the federal government can’t bypass him to “control, punish, or discharge Texas’ Guardsmen.”
In response to the Jun. 30 deadline, Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) introduced a one-page bill that would ban the Defense Secretary from taking “any adverse actions” against National Guard members for rejecting the vaccine, including “retaliation, punishment, or disparate treatment.”

“Our servicemembers are the bedrock of America,” said Blackburn. “Firing 40,000 Guardsmen for refusing the COVID vaccine would be both a complete disgrace and a threat to our national security.”

Of all the U.S. military services, the Army National Guard was given the longest amount of time to vaccinate its members, who are scattered around the country. Vaccination deadlines passed Nov. 2 for the Air Force and Space Force, Nov. 28 for the Navy and Marine Corps, and Dec. 15 for the Army.

The Army Guard’s vaccine percentage is also the lowest of all the services. The Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Space Force have reported vaccination rates at 97 percent or greater, and the Air National Guard is at almost 94 percent.

The Air Force, which is responsible for deciding what to do with Air Guardsmen who refuse to get vaccinated, has so far separated 672 Air Force members for that reason. The service didn’t provide data on how many Air Guardsmen had been separated to date.

Bill Pan
Bill Pan
Reporter
Bill Pan is an Epoch Times reporter covering education issues and New York news.
Related Topics