Service members are contacting exit hotlines in unprecedented numbers amid the US-Israeli war against Iran and Trump administration policies. Organizations like the Center on Conscience and War report more than 80 new clients in March alone, nearly double their annual average. Calls cite ethical concerns, including a US bombing that killed 165 civilians at a girls' school.
Bill Galvin, counseling director at the Center on Conscience and War, which runs the GI Rights Hotline, said his team handled its busiest day with 12 new clients, including a platoon where four members sought discharge. Most callers want to apply as conscientious objectors, a process involving psych evaluations and interviews that can take months but removes them from objected duties immediately. Mike Prysner, the center's executive director and an Army veteran, noted a shift from a few calls weekly to three or four daily since the Iran war began, with applicants from elite units like Special Forces and a major as their highest-ranking client. Steve Woolford of Quaker House reported doubled call volumes, with service members worried about illegal orders or war crimes despite not identifying as pacifists. Many reference the bombing of an Iranian girls' school on the war's first day, which a preliminary US assessment blamed on outdated target lists from its prior use as a Revolutionary Guard base. An anonymous Army career counselor said retention is crumbling due to cultural shifts, with record early retirements and first-termers seeking early reserve status. Kori Schake of the American Enterprise Institute criticized the administration for dragging the military into culture wars, eroding perceptions of meritocracy for women and people of color. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's actions, including firing Army chief Gen. Randy George and halting promotions of two Black and two female officers to one-star general, have fueled frustration. An Ohio Air National Guard member, triggered by six airmen killed in an Iraq refueling crash on March 12, is job-hunting despite two years left on his contract. Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson insisted there are 'zero retention concerns' for fiscal 2026, with all services meeting targets. White House spokesperson Anna Kelly highlighted restored readiness under President Trump.