4 Ways to Avoid a Draft - wikiHow (2024)

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1Seeking Legal Advice

2Filing for Conscientious Objector Status

3Filing a Refugee Claim

4Qualifying as Exempt, Deferring Service, or Refusing

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Wars are a terrible reality of life. Worse still is that you, even if you oppose war, can be forced to fight through what is called a military draft. Many countries require men (and less often women) to serve in the military in war or even in peace. While we no longer have an active draft, all male US citizens and some male immigrants aged 18 to 25 must also register with Selective Service for a potential future draft within 30 days of turning 18. What are you to do? Rest assured that there are a few options – some legal, some illegal – that can help you to avoid fighting.

Method 1

Method 1 of 4:

Seeking Legal Advice

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  1. 1

    Consult a good lawyer. Evading a mandatory military service is a crime and often carries serious consequences. In one recent case, an Australian national was arrested and jailed in Israel for draft evasion; she had lived there for four years as a teenager.[1] Talk to a lawyer before you do anything. They can update you on the law and give you advice about your options.

  2. 2

    Research relevant cases. Look into the files of recent service evaders with your lawyer. In the US, for example, there have been a number of high-profile cases in the last ten years of soldiers refusing to serve. Some tried to flee to Canada[2] but have mostly been deported, ending up in legal trouble.[3] Although these men are legally deserters, not draft evaders, their stories can be helpful and give you a better sense of your options – and of the potential consequences of draft dodging.

    • Recently, Polish men have been moving to Britain in order to escape the draft in their country, which is punishable by three years in prison. They have been able to do so because of fairly open freedom of movement between countries in the European Union.[4]

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  3. 3

    Assess your options. You are about to take a very serious and potentially life-changing step. Examine all of your options with a lawyer. Know the latest case law. Be sure that you are making the right choice and that you have a plan for all possible outcomes.

    • Questions to consider include whether you have dual citizenship in a country not at war. It may be possible for you to go there. Are you gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, or intersex? Many militaries do not let such people serve in the military.
    • Are you a member of a religious organization that is historically pacifist, like the Quakers, Mennonites, or Jehovah’s Witnesses? If so, you may qualify as a “conscientious objector” or someone who opposes war or violence by reason of religious belief.
    • Do you have any physical or mental conditions that could prevent you from being drafted? Document them. Do you have a mild case of asthma? Go to the doctor once a month to get it on record. Whatever your condition, document it as much as possible. You will need to present comprehensive documentation.
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  1. 1

    File a written application. Conscientious objectors are excused from military service in many countries. In the US, they not only include members of pacifist churches like the Jehovah’s Witnesses, Quakers, Mennonites, and Amish but also anyone who claims, and can prove, to have a “firm, fixed and sincere objection to participation in war in any form or the bearing of arms, by reason of religious training and belief.” There are also two distinct classes: Class 1-O and Class 1-A-O. The first is for people who sincerely object to any participation in war whatsoever. The second group object to participation in war as combatants, but not to participation in a non-combatant role.

    • To start the process, you will have to file a formal application. You will have to document your views and prove to the investigators of your claim that you are not objecting simply to avoid service or out of expedience. You have to show that your reasons are based on sincere belief. Your investigators will judge your participation in a religious organization, your pattern of conduct, whether your beliefs were shaped by serious ethical or moral study, and other factors.
  2. 2

    Attend your interviews and hearing. You will most likely be interviewed as part of the review of your conscientious objector application. Very probably you will have to speak with a psychologist, a military chaplain (a pastor, rabbi, or imam depending on your religious affiliation), and finally an investigating officer in a hearing. They will be judging the sincerity of your beliefs and whether your claim is credible. Again, you will have to give detailed information about your beliefs and their basis as well as your religious life. You may also be able to have third parties testify on your behalf.

    • Keep in mind that your interviews are not “privileged.” This means, for example, that they can ask confidential questions about you from a chaplain who knows you previously. In this case, you should request to be interviewed by a different chaplain.
  3. 3

    Await the results of the informal investigation. After the interviews, the investigating officer will file a report on your case. This usually consists of items like statements and other documents received during the hearing, summaries of witness testimony, conclusions about the basis of your objections, and recommendations for your classification as a conscientious objector. The whole file will then be reviewed by a military judge advocate, and sent on to whatever headquarters makes the final decision.

    • Since the US now has a voluntary military and requires you to swear an oath at your induction into the service, becoming a conscientious objector is hard. Basically, you have to be able to prove that your views on war changed after you swore the military oath.
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Method 3

Method 3 of 4:

Filing a Refugee Claim

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  1. 1

    Judge the chances of your case. It is hard to obtain refugee status to evade a draft. International law is not clear on the matter – refugees from military service are not included in the Geneva conventions nor necessarily excluded. Rather, your case depends in part on your civil and legal status at home. Talk with a lawyer over the merits of your case, if you can, before taking the uncertain step of applying for refugee status.

    • The UN considers there to be five situations when refugee status is appropriate: if the punishment for objecting from conscience amounts to “persecution”; if you have objected to military acts that are atrocities or violate standards of international law; if you object to military service in conditions that amount to torture or inhumane treatment; if you are fleeing recruitment by a non-state group and the state is unable to protect you; or if you are a child resisting illegal recruitment.[5]
  2. 2

    Choose a refuge country carefully. If you decide to pursue a refugee claim, be very careful with your choice of host country. You should file as a refugee in a country that will not send you back to your home country. For instance, the days of safely crossing the border to Canada as a US military objector are long over. While the legal landscape is not entirely clear, deserters and others can be arrested and deported to face trial under the terms of the current extradition treaty.[6] Countries that don’t often deport US citizens include Ecuador, Russia, and Venezuela.[7]

  3. 3

    Make an application. The next step is to file a formal application seeking protection as a refugee. If you are outside of your target country, you will probably file as a refugee to the closest at the nearest embassy or consulate; if you are already inside the country or at a port of entry, you will apply as an asylum seeker. As part of your application you will also have to present proof of your claims of persecution.[8]

    • Make sure to consult an attorney at this stage, if possible. She can guide you through the sometimes complicated legal forms.
    • Keep in mind that the approval process will be lengthy. In Canada, for example, wait times can be as long as 36 months.[9]
    • You may not be able to work for part of this time, if you are allowed entry. In the United States, asylum applicants must wait 150 days before they can apply for work-status.[10]
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Method 4

Method 4 of 4:

Qualifying as Exempt, Deferring Service, or Refusing

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  1. 1

    File for an exemption. Most countries make certain exemptions from conscription. For example, religious students in Israel were until recently exempt from the draft. You are exempt from a future draft in the United States under the following conditions: you are from a family in which a parent or sibling has died or is missing in military action; your absence would cause your family economic hardship; you are a minister; you are in school to be a minister; you are an immigrant or dual citizen.[11]

    • Remember that the US does not currently have a draft. You can only file an exemption claim in the future, after getting orders to report, to the closest Selective Service office.[12]
    • Some countries, including the US until recently, prohibit gay people from serving. This is still the case in Turkey, where, however, you have to submit “proof” of your status by answering questions, providing pictures, or worse. Making use of this exemption can get you out of a draft, but can be traumatic and humiliating.[13]
    • Some countries also allow you to pay an exemption fee to get out of military service. In Turkey, this fee was recently lowered from 10,000 to 6,000 Euros. Still, the cost is so expensive that only well off families can afford it.
  2. 2

    Defer your service. If you are not exempt, you still may be able to put off entering the military. Many countries offer deferments for education, for example. According to US law, high school students may defer their service in any future draft until they graduate or reach the age of 20. College students may defer until the end of their term. You can defer your service until the end of your studies if you are becoming a minister.[14]

    • The law in the United States also provides for appeals to draft status. If, in the event of a future draft, you file to change your draft classification, you automatically get a deferral until your claim is processed.[15]
  3. 3

    Refuse to serve. This is a final option. Just don’t do it. However, you will have to face harsh consequences for refusal. In the US, during wartime and peacetime drafts, people have been jailed for refusing to be inducted into the military. Muhammad Ali famously refused to be drafted to fight in the Vietnam War, for example, and he was indicted, sentenced to five years in prison, and stripped of his boxing titles. Under current law, men are required to register for selective service – for a future draft – and refusal to register is a criminal offense.

    • In the United States, you can be prosecuted for refusing to register with Selective Service, though this has not happened since 1986.[16] The government can also deny you federal student aid, employment with the government, or, if you are an eligible immigrant, US citizenship.[17]
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  • Question

    Is the draft slavery?

    4 Ways to Avoid a Draft - wikiHow (19)

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    Many people feel this way; the difference, it would seem, is that drafted soldiers receive pay.

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  • Question

    How old do I have to be to join the Marines?

    4 Ways to Avoid a Draft - wikiHow (20)

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    You have to be at least 17 (with a parent's consent), or 18 (without a parent's consent) to join the USMC.

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  • Question

    Would it be enough to file a condition claim if I have somewhat severe asthma, so that even doing simple exercises makes it hard to breathe? I would mainly not be able to keep up with the others.

    4 Ways to Avoid a Draft - wikiHow (21)

    Community Answer

    Yes, if you have a health problem, you wouldn't be drafted. The process of drafting someone involves a health check, asthma would stop you from going to war.

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      References

      1. https://www.timesofisrael.com/australian-visiting-israel-jailed-for-draft-dodging/
      2. https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/more-u-s-soldiers-could-be-sent-back-for-court-martial-on-desertion-charges/article_836cdab8-dba4-53f8-9433-225c9f9c1940.html
      3. https://www.ctvnews.ca/canada/u-s-soldiers-say-canada-no-longer-a-haven-for-war-resisters-1.2465569
      4. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-494661/Thousands-Poles-moving-Britain-avoid-national-service.html
      5. https://www.unhcr.org/52a715379.html
      6. https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/us-war-resisters-experience-difficulties-finding-refuge-in-canada/article25476223/
      7. https://www.usnews.com/news/newsgram/articles/2013/06/24/snowden-runs-where-can-us-citizens-avoid-extradition
      8. https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/asylum-or-refugee-status-how-32299.html
      9. https://www.cic.gc.ca/english/helpcentre/answer.asp?q=084&t=11

      More References (8)

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      wikiHow is a “wiki,” similar to Wikipedia, which means that many of our articles are co-written by multiple authors. To create this article, 58 people, some anonymous, worked to edit and improve it over time. This article has been viewed 185,805 times.

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      4 Ways to Avoid a Draft - wikiHow (2024)

      FAQs

      4 Ways to Avoid a Draft - wikiHow? ›

      Claiming conscientious objector status on the basis of sincerely held religious or ethical beliefs. Claiming a student deferment, when one is in school primarily in order to study and learn. Claiming a medical or psychological problem, if the purported health issue is genuine and serious.

      What were 3 ways to avoid the draft? ›

      Claiming conscientious objector status on the basis of sincerely held religious or ethical beliefs. Claiming a student deferment, when one is in school primarily in order to study and learn. Claiming a medical or psychological problem, if the purported health issue is genuine and serious.

      What exempts you from being drafted? ›

      Certain elected officials, exempt so long as they continue to hold office. Veterans, generally exempt from service in peacetime draft. Immigrants and dual nationals in some cases may be exempt from U.S. military service depending upon their place of residence and country of citizenship.

      Can I refuse to be drafted? ›

      If you get a draft notice, show up, and refuse induction, you'll probably be prosecuted. However, some people will slip through the cracks in the system, and some will win in court. If you show up and take the physical, there's a good chance that you'll flunk.

      Can the draft be avoided? ›

      Exemptions are traditionally granted to those who are conscientiously opposed to military service Page 11 Exemptions and Deferments for a Possible Military Draft 10 due to religious, moral, or ethical beliefs. Those who are granted an exemption are not required to serve in a military draft.

      How did hippies avoid the draft? ›

      Beginning in 1964, students began burning their draft cards as acts of defiance. [1] By 1969, student body presidents of 253 universities wrote to the White House to say that they personally planned to refuse induction, joining the half million others who would do so during the course of the war.

      Is draft dodging illegal? ›

      If required to register with Selective Service, failure to register is a felony punishable by a fine of up to $250,000 and/or 5 years imprisonment. Also, a person who knowingly counsels, aids, or abets another to fail to comply with the registration requirement is subject to the same penalties.

      Who gets drafted first? ›

      The first to be called, in a sequence determined by the lottery, will be men whose 20th birthday falls during the calendar year the induction takes place, followed, as needed, by those aged 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 19, and 18 (in that order).

      Can felons get drafted? ›

      Where there are a father and sons in the same household, and two of them are in the military service of the United States as non-commissioned officers, musicians or privates, the residue of such family and household, not exceeding two, shall be exempt, and no persons but such as are herein exempted shall be exempt: ...

      Can obese people be drafted? ›

      Although each branch of service differs slightly in its body composition standards for enlistment and retention, Department of Defense (DoD) guidelines issued in 2002 mandate the upper limits for two common metrics: maximum BMI set between 25 and 27.5 kg/m2 and maximum allowable body fat set at or below 28% for men and ...

      Can girls get drafted? ›

      While women officers and enlisted personnel serve with distinction in the U.S. Armed Forces, women have never been subject to Selective Service registration or a military draft in America. Those women who served in the past and those who serve today in ever increasing numbers all volunteered for military service.

      Do Amish get drafted? ›

      The U.S. begins a national conscription service; some Amish boys receive exemptions for farm deferments as conscientious objectors, but others are required to report to Army camps. Drafted Amish who refuse to enter armed service are sent to the Army camps for non-combatant service and are often subjected to abuse.

      Is there going to be a draft in 2024? ›

      The 2024 NFL Draft is scheduled to take place from April 25 to April 27. Round 1: Thursday, April 25 at 8 p.m. ET. Rounds 2-3: Friday, April 26 at 7 p.m. ET. Rounds 4-7: Saturday, April 27 at noon ET.

      What disqualifies you from drafting? ›

      Here are the six top reasons why:
      • Obesity. An FMWR group fitness class student at work at the Sgt. ...
      • Education. Sgt. ...
      • Criminal Records. ...
      • Health Problems. ...
      • Drugs. ...
      • The Usual Reasons.
      Jan 7, 2020

      Can autistic people be drafted? ›

      According to the information presented by the US Air Force and other branches, people with Autism Spectrum Disorder aren't forbidden to go into the military. However, it is restricted to people that have a condition that would personally hinder their ability to carry out their duties.

      What celebrities dodged the Vietnam draft? ›

      American draft evaders who left for Canada and became prominent there include politician Jim Green, gay rights advocate Michael Hendricks, attorney Jeffry House, author Keith Maillard, playwright John Murrell, television personality Eric Nagler, film critic Jay Scott, and musician Jesse Winchester.

      What were three ways some men avoided being drafted to go to Vietnam? ›

      To avoid being drafted to fight in Vietnam, young men in America could choose from four basic types of draft evasion: Ethical Deferment. Un-Ethical Deferment. Conscientious Objection.

      What were two ways to avoid the draft in the Civil war? ›

      The option to hire a substitute or pay a fee not to serve angered many Americans, who complained about the conflict's being a “rich man's war and [a] poor man's fight.” With many tens of thousands of soldiers dying of disease, infections, and wounds, it was not surprising that large numbers of men tried to avoid the ...

      How did people avoid the draft in 1965? ›

      Some sought refuge in college or parental deferments; others intentionally failed aptitude tests or otherwise evaded; thousands fled to Canada; the politically connected sought refuge in the National Guard; and a growing number engaged in direct resistance.

      How did people avoid the draft for the American Revolution? ›

      Both sides permitted conscripts to hire substitutes to serve in their place. In the Union, many states and cities offered bounties and bonuses for enlistment. They also arranged to take credit against their draft quota by claiming freed slaves who enlisted in the Union Army.

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