Can a soldier refuse to be deployed?

"The Army is a values-based organization which embraces the values of loyalty, duty, respect, selfless service, honor, integrity and personal courage; for a soldier to violate military law by refusing to obey orders is a serious matter," Fort Hood officials said in a statement released late Wednesday.
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Can you choose not to be deployed?

You do not get to choose where to deploy. Not usually. You may request a duty assignment that will actively place you in rotation for combat theater but it is not possible to join specifically for the purpose of deploying to war.
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What happens if a soldier refuses deployment?

The stiffest charge, missing movement, carries a maximum penalty of two years in prison and a dishonorable discharge.
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Can you refuse military deployment?

Military law provides several routes to voluntary discharge, including conscientious objection, physical or mental conditions, family hardship or homosexual conduct.
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Can a soldier refuse to go to war?

But where an order is not illegal, but appears ethically unjust from their perspective, soldiers have no right to refuse to carry it out. Soldiers must therefore follow the order to engage in direct combat in any conflict no matter how questionable its morality, so long as the order in question was legal.
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What Happens When You Go AWOL?



What happens if a soldier refuses to fight?

Desertion carries a maximum punishment of dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of all pay, and confinement of five years. For desertion during a time of war, however, the death penalty may be applied (at the discretion of the court-martial).
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Can a soldier refuse an unlawful order?

Generally, however, an officer or soldier may disobey an unlawful order to the point of mutiny (see Nuremberg defense). In the U.S. military, insubordination is covered under Article 91 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
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What makes a Soldier non deployable?

Soldiers are considered non-deployable if they meet one of the following: Deployed. Soldiers that are currently mobilized according to Defense Finance & Accounting Service (DFAS). Minimal Training Not Completed.
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Are deployments mandatory?

Generally it is mandatory except for extenuating circumstances. Mostly mandatory, health related issues may effect deployment status.
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Can deployments be Cancelled?

Cancellations of deployments don't happen very often, so it is hard to predict what will happen next. Since 2010, our country has maintained a two carrier presence in the Persian Gulf. That has now changed.
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What happens if you stop going to drill?

Air Force Reserves and National Guard

Entry Level airmen who refuse to participate in a weekend drill or refuse orders to IADT are almost always discharged. Most such discharges are characterized as entry level. However, Reservists who go AWOL during IADT are processed the same as active duty members.
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How long is the jail sentence for refusing to go to war?

Knowing and willful refusal to present oneself for and submit to registration as ordered is punishable by a maximum penalty of up to five years in Federal prison and/or a fine of US$250,000, although there have been no prosecutions of draft registration resisters since January 1986.
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Can a soldier request to go home?

Service members may request leave at any time. Approval will be at the discretion of the command, based upon a wide variety of factors including operational requirements. Some commands may have specified times when all or portions of the command can take leave at the same time.
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Do you have to deploy in the Army?

A soldier (or sailor, or airman or Marine) can be on active duty but not deployed, but you won't be deployed unless you're on active duty. Even Reservists or National Guard get "activated" in order to deploy.
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Which branch deploys the most?

Soldiers on active duty in the Army deploy more than any other branch, with the possible exception of the Navy (although most Navy deployments are on ships at sea). How often you deploy depends on whether the U.S. is involved in any ongoing conflicts. Deployment is also heavily determined by your Army job.
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What is the safest position in the military?

Here are the six jobs that are considered to be the “safest” in the military:
  • Administration & Support Positions.
  • Financial Management Technicians.
  • Human Resources (HR) Specialists.
  • Clothing Repair Specialists.
  • Paralegal Specialists.
  • Dental Specialists.
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Which branch gets deployed the least?

When one examines the numbers by branch and component, those with the lowest average numbers of deployments were the Coast Guard and Marine Corps reserves (1.22 and 1.29, respectively) and those in the regular Coast Guard (1.28).
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How likely is it to get deployed in the army?

Roughly 40% of those who join the military never get deployed to a combat zone at all. 10% to 20% of those who do find themselves on a deployment wind up in a combat zone. Remember, that is not 10 to 20% of the total. It is just 10 to 20% of the 60% who get deployed.
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Do deployed soldiers use WhatsApp?

Even if your military deployment agenda does not allow for daily chats or Skype conversations, a quick WhatsApp message or SMS can be enough to reassure and to help your children get a good night's sleep when mummy or daddy are thousands of miles away.
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What can keep you from deploying?

A medical evaluator could sign a deployment diagnoses waiver; but the evaluator must consider a lot of factors like “climate; altitude; nature of available food and housing; availability of medical, behavioral health, and dental services; or other environmental and operational factors [that] may be hazardous to the ...
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How long can you be non-deployable?

Soldiers who are non-deployable for an administrative reason (not medical or legal as defined in reference j) for more than 6 consecutive months, or 6 nonconsecutive months in a 12-month period, will be processed for administrative separation.
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What medicine makes you non-deployable?

This includes Ambien, Ambien CR, Lunesta, Sonata, ProSom, Halcion, Restoril, Dalmane, etc. Antipsychotics, including atypical antipsychotic medication.
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What is an illegal order in the military?

Military members disobey orders at their own risk. They also obey orders at their own risk. An order to commit a crime is unlawful. An order to perform a military duty, no matter how dangerous, is lawful as long as it doesn't involve the commission of a crime.
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Do good soldiers always follow orders?

Every military officer swears an oath upon commissioning. That oath is not to obey all orders. It is to “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic.” It is simply wrong to say Calley had an obligation to follow any order no matter what.
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What is an Article 92?

Updated on December 27, 2018. Article 92 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) is "Failure to Obey an Order or Regulation" (written or stated). The U.S. military considers it a dereliction of duty when soldiers are unable or unwilling to perform the job assigned to military personnel.
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