[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 32, Volume 1]

[Revised as of July 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 32CFR75.5]



[Page 438-439]

 

                       TITLE 32--NATIONAL DEFENSE

 

              CHAPTER I--OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE

 

PART 75_CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTORS--Table of Contents

 

Sec.  75.5  Criteria.



    General. The criteria set forth herein provide policy and guidance 

in considering applications for separation or for assignment to 

noncombatant training and service based on conscientious objection.

    (a) Consistent with the national policy to recognize the claims of 

bona fide conscientious objectors in the military service, an 

application for classification as a conscientious objector may be 

approved (subject to the limitations of Sec.  75.4(a)) for any 

individual:

    (1) Who is conscientiously opposed to participation in war in any 

form;

    (2) Whose opposition is founded on religious training and beliefs; 

and

    (3) Whose position is sincere and deeply held.

    (b) War in any form: The clause ``war in any form'' should be 

interpreted in the following manner:

    (1) An individual who desires to choose the war in which he will 

participate is not a conscientious objector under the law. His objection 

must be to all wars rather than a specific war;

    (2) A belief in a theocratic or spiritual war between the powers of 

good and evil does not constitute a willingness to participate in 

``war'' within the meaning of this part.

    (c) Religious training and belief: (1) In order to find that an 

applicant's moral and ethical beliefs are against participation in war 

in any form and are held with the strength of traditional religious 

convictions, the applicant must show that these moral and ethical 

convictions, once acquired, have directed his life in the way 

traditional religious convictions of equal strength, depth and duration 

have directed the lives of those whose beliefs are clearly found in 

traditional religious convictions. In other words, the belief upon which 

conscientious objection is based must be the primary controlling force 

in the applicant's life.

    (2) A primary factor to be considered is the sincerity with which 

the belief is held. Great care must be exercised in seeking to determine 

whether asserted beliefs are honestly and genuinely held. Sincerity is 

determined by an impartial evaluation of the applicant's thinking and 

living in its totality, past and present. Care must be exercised in 

determining the integrity of belief and the consistency of application. 

Information presented by the claimant should be sufficient to convince 

that the claimant's personal history reveals views and actions strong 

enough to demonstrate that expediency or avoidance of military service 

is not the basis of his claim.

    (i) Therefore, in evaluating applications the conduct of applicants, 

in particular their outward manifestation of the beliefs asserted, will 

be carefully examined and given substantial weight.

    (ii) Relevant factors that should be considered in determining an 

applicant's claim of conscientious objection include: Training in the 

home and church; general demeanor and pattern of conduct; participation 

in religious activities; whether ethical or moral convictions were 

gained through training, study, contemplation, or other activity 

comparable in rigor and dedication to the processes by which traditional 

religious convictions are formulated; credibility of the applicant; and 

credibility of persons supporting the claim.

    (iii) Particular care must be exercised not to deny the existence of 

bona fide beliefs simply because those beliefs are incompatible with 

one's own.

    (a) Church membership or adherence to particular theological tenets 

are not required to warrant separation or assignment to noncombatant 

training and service for conscientious objectors.

    (b) Mere affiliation with a church or other group which advocates 

conscientious objection as a tenet of its creed is not necessarily 

determinative of an applicant's position or belief.

    (c) Conversely, affiliation with a church or group which does not 

teach conscientious objection does not necessarily rule out adherence to 

conscientious objection beliefs in any given case.

    (d) Where an applicant is or has been a member of a church, 

religious organization, or religious sect, and where his claim of 

conscientious objection is related to such membership, inquiry may 

properly be made as to the fact of



[[Page 439]]



membership, and the teaching of the church, religious organization, or 

religious sect, as well as the applicant's religious activity. However, 

the fact that the applicant may disagree with, or not subscribe to, some 

of the tenets of his church does not necessarily discredit his claim. 

The personal convictions of each individual will be controlling so long 

as they derive from his moral, ethical or religious beliefs.

    (e) Moreover, an applicant who is otherwise eligible for 

conscientious objector status may not be denied that status simply 

because his conscientious objection influences his views concerning the 

Nation's domestic or foreign policies. The task is to decide whether the 

beliefs professed are sincerely held, and whether they govern the 

claimant's actions in both word and deed.

    (d) The burden of establishing a claim of conscientious objection as 

a ground for separation or assignment to noncombatant training and 

service is on the applicant. To this end, he must establish by clear and 

convincing evidence: (1) That the nature or basis of his claim comes 

within the definition of and criteria prescribed herein for 

conscientious objection, and (2) that his belief in connection therewith 

is honest, sincere and deeply held. The claimant has the burden of 

determining and setting forth the exact nature of his request, i.e., 

whether for separation based on conscientious objection (1-O) or for 

assignment to noncombatant training and service based on conscientious 

objection (1-A-O).

    (e) An applicant claiming 1-O status shall not be granted 1-A-O 

status as a compromise.

    (f) Persons who were classified 1-A-O by Selective Service prior to 

induction shall upon induction be transferred to a training center, or 

station, for recruit training, and shall be subject to noncombatant 

service or training. They will be required to sign and date a statement 

as set forth in the form in Sec.  75.11. Thereafter, upon completion of 

recruit training, they shall be assigned to noncombatant duty. They may 

be transferred to the medical corps, or a medical department or unit for 

further training, provided they meet the requirements therefor. Such 

persons when assigned to medical units will not be allowed to avoid the 

important or hazardous duties which are part of the responsibility of 

all members of the medical organization. Any person who does not meet 

the requirements for this training, who fails to complete the prescribed 

course of instruction, or who otherwise cannot be assigned to this duty 

will be assigned to other noncombatant duties.

    (g) Commanders at levels directed by the service headquarters are 

authorized to return to an applicant, without action, any second or 

subsequent application that is based upon essentially the same grounds, 

or supported by essentially the same evidence, as a previous application 

disapproved by the military service concerned.

    (h) The provisions of this part will not be used to effect the 

administrative separation of individuals who do not qualify as 

conscientious objectors, or in lieu of administrative separation 

procedures such as those provided for unsuitability or unfitness or as 

otherwise set forth in part 41 of this title. Individuals determined not 

qualified for conscientious objector status, but the separation of whom 

would otherwise appear to be in the best interest of the Armed Forces, 

should be considered for administrative separation under the provisions 

of part 41 of this title. Under no circumstances will administrative 

separation of these individuals be effected pursuant to this part.

    (i) Nothing in this part prevents the administrative elimination, 

pursuant to law and regulations of the military department concerned, of 

any officer whose classification as a 1-A-O conscientious objector 

results in substandard performance of duty or other cause for 

elimination.