Hegseth ends mandatory flu vaccine for service members |
Hegseth ends mandatory flu vaccine for service members
The Pentagon is ending mandatory flu vaccines for service members, phrasing the change as giving troops “medical autonomy” and “freedom to express their religious convictions,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced Tuesday.
“Our new policy is simple. If you, an American warrior entrusted to defend this nation, believe that the flu vaccine is in your best interest, then you’re free to take it. You should. But we will not force you. Because your body, your faith are not negotiable,” Hegseth said in a video message posted to social media.
He called the flu shot requirement part of “absurd, overreaching mandates that only weaken our warfighting capabilities.”
“Our men and women in uniform were forced to choose between their conscience and their country, even when those decisions posed no threat to our military readiness,” Hegseth said of the previous guidelines. “The notion that a flu vaccine must be mandatory for every service member everywhere in every circumstance at all times is just overly broad and not rational.”
The new rule, laid out in a brief April 20 memo, goes a step further than the Defense Department policy from May 2025 that carved out flu shot exemptions for reservists and proclaimed that the vaccine was only necessary in some circumstances for all service members.
The policy change also comes after the Trump administration offered major changes to other vaccination guidance, spurred on by advice from anti-vaccine figures.
Vaccines have been a key focus in President Trump’s second term, with the Pentagon offering back pay and the chance to rejoin the military for the thousands of veterans discharged from the armed forces for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine during the Biden administration.
More than 8,000 service members were separated from the military for refusing to comply with the Pentagon’s coronavirus vaccine mandate.
Trump, in a January executive order, called for allowing such service members to enlist, but the overwhelming majority have declined to do so, with less than 200 taking the option.
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