US Army to let go of soldiers refusing COVID-19 vaccination 

US Army

The US Army in all earnestness is letting go of soldiers refusing COVID-19 vaccination. The US Army announced on Wednesday that soldiers who refuse to receive the COVID-19 vaccine will receive termination immediately. Unless they have ratified or pending privileges, the army’s order pertains to everyone including regular army personnel, active-duty army reservists, and cadets, according to a statement.

“Unvaccinated Soldiers present a risk to the force and jeopardize readiness. We will begin involuntary separation proceedings for soldiers who refuse the vaccine order and are not pending a final decision on an exemption,” Secretary of the Army Christine Wormuth said in a statement.

According to the announcement, more than 3,000 soldiers will receive orders to leave their positions. By the end of 2021, the army had a total of 482,000 active-duty soldiers. Six high-ranking officers, including two battalion commanders, as of January 26, had to leave their jobs. It was an aftereffect of their decline to receive Covid-19 vaccinations. 3,073 troops have formal “reprimands” from the army for refusing to take the vaccination.

A sole COVID-19 case may contaminate an entire ship: US Navy

Personnel who refrain from taking vaccination against COVID-19 will receive termination from the US Navy, the US Navy said in mid-October. A sole COVID-19 case may contaminate an entire ship or submarine at sea. Thereby, pulling it out of service and it has been extremely susceptible to the pandemic. The navy stated in a news release that closely 8,000 active duty and reserve service personnel were still unvaccinated. Also, 118 individuals were terminated as an effect of their nonacceptance to accept the vaccine. The Marine Corps removed more than 300 Marines.

However, after the Pentagon made the vaccine obligatory for all service members in August 2021, the vindication ruling is the latest from a US military department terminating unvaccinated service members amid the pandemic. At least one dose has been distributed to the considerable bulk of active-duty armies. A total of 79 uniformed military staff from numerous duties have succumbed as a consequence of the new coronavirus.

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