Major who refused vaccine leaves
service
by Susan Vela
The Cincinnati Enquirer
March 31, 2000
Air Force Maj. Sonnie Bates, a Northern Kentucky native and one
of the
highest-ranking military officers to refuse the controversial
anthrax
vaccine, ended his 14-year military career Thursday.
Maj. Bates, 35, of Independence, went to Dover Air Force Base in
Delaware,
signed papers, turned in his identification card and drove off
the base as a
civilian.
It was the latest chapter in his fight to persuade legislators
and military
officials to stop administering the vaccine. He believes the
shots, meant to
protect soldiers from biological warfare, are causing serious
medical
problems.
Originally, Maj. Bates faced a court-martial on a charge of
refusing an order
and five years in prison if convicted. He also was
grounded for refusing
his vaccination Dec. 3.
In mid-February, Maj. Bates agreed to an administrative hearing
by his
commander, which allowed him to avoid a conviction on his record.
On Feb. 28,
he was fined $3,200 and was given a career-damaging official
reprimand.
Your disobedience of the lawful order of a direct superior
commander
undermines the very essence of military good order and
discipline, the
reprimand said. Your failure to live up to these standards
cannot be
condoned.
This month his attorney who had vowed an appeal
struck a deal with
military officials. He got Maj. Bates a general discharge under
hon orable
circumstances, which became effective Thursday.
Maj. Bates, a 1986 Northern Kentucky University graduate and
father of three,
had mixed emotions.
I was able to leave under honorable conditions. If we had
gone through with
the court-martial, we would most likely have lost, he said
in an interview
via e-mail.
I can only describe what has happened to me as abandonment
and lack of
integrity by our senior-ranking officials. Peoples' lives are
being ruined by
this vaccine.
I have lost my career simply for telling the truth. How
many people in
America have lost their job or right to serve for refusing to
allow a risky
substance into their bloodstream? I am not the only military
member wrongly
dis charged over this issue. These unjust convictions must be
overturned and
the anthrax vaccine program put in check.
Maj. Bates hasn't been a civilian since 1986, when he joined the
Air Force
three months after graduating with a bachelor's degree in math
from NKU, His
discharge guarantees that he'll get veterans' benefits and be
able to get
another federal government job. He has no immediate employment
plans.
He plans to remain vigilant in his criticism of the anthrax
program. He will
continue pushing for the passage of House Resolution 2548, which
would
suspend the Defense Department's anthrax vaccination program.
He also is committed to telling high-school students about the
risks of being
unwill ingly exposed to chemicals by their own military.
Potential recruits need to know that under current
conditions they give up
their right to their own body when they sign up ... even in
peacetime, he
said.
Maj. Bates' struggle has received support from some Tristate
legislators,
including U.S. Rep. Ken Lucas, D-Richwood, and U.S. Rep. Dan
Burton, R-Ind.
Mr. Lucas, who supports House Resolution 2548, was sympathetic to
Maj. Bates'
official discharge Thursday.
It is unfortunate that the situation was resolved in this
fashion, he
said. At a time when we are having trouble recruiting and
retaining the best
and brightest in our military, it is troubling that we have lost
someone of
Maj. Bates' caliber.
Reports of servicemen and -women who may have suffered
permanent damage from
the vaccine are of great concern. The questions surrounding (the
anthrax
program) are substantial enough to call for further study. During
that time,
I think it is only wise that we suspend the program.
Two years ago, Defense Secretary William Cohen ordered all 2.4
million
active-duty and reserve troops to get anthrax shots. About 340,000
service
members have been immunized and 300 have refused to take the
vaccine because
of concerns about safety, Pentagon officials say.
Livestock handlers have been vaccinated against the bacterium
that normally
afflicts animals since 1970.