Write your conscientious objector file.

A private workspace for documenting an objection to war: the statement, the evidence, the record. Everything stays on this device — no account, no server, nothing leaves this page unless you export it.

If you are in the military and considering this, your first call is the GI Rights Hotline: 1-877-447-4487 — free counseling from people who have walked hundreds of these claims through. This page is for the writing.

This is education and a place to write, not legal advice, and it decides nothing. Only your Military Department or a Selective Service board can classify anyone a conscientious objector. Nothing here scores your sincerity or predicts an outcome.

Start reading

What the law asks

A conscientious objector is someone with “a firm, fixed, and sincere objection to participation in war in any form or the bearing of arms, by reason of religious training and/or belief.” That single sentence, from the Department of Defense’s own instruction, carries three tests. You must meet all three, and the burden of proof is yours — by clear and convincing evidence.

War in any form. The objection must be to taking part personally in all war — not one particular war, and not war as bad policy. “An individual who desires to choose a specific war in which to participate is not a conscientious objector under the law.” You do not have to oppose all violence: objecting to police force or personal self-defense is not required. Counselors draw the line between violent force and nonviolent force — punching someone is one thing; pulling a child away from a moving car is another.

A religious, moral, or ethical basis. Belief in God is not required. The Supreme Court settled this twice: a sincere belief that “occupies a place in the life of its possessor parallel to that filled by the orthodox belief in God” qualifies (Seeger, 1965), and deeply held moral or ethical convictions qualify even if you call yourself non-religious (Welsh, 1970). What cannot carry a claim by itself: politics, policy, pragmatism, expediency.

Sincere and deeply held. Sincerity is judged from your thinking and living in its totality, past and present. Conduct — “the outward manifestation of the beliefs asserted” — is examined and given substantial weight. You cannot prove a belief directly; the record has to show it.

None of the following disqualifies you: belonging to no religious organization; belonging to a tradition that is not pacifist; disagreeing with parts of your own tradition. And membership in a peace church does not prove a claim either. Boards judge sincerity, not theology.

Two classifications

1-O — objection to all military participation. In service, this means administrative discharge. Under a draft, it means 24 months of civilian alternative service instead of induction.

1-A-O — objection to combatant duties only. You serve, unarmed at all times — historically most often in the medical corps. Two things to weigh before choosing it: noncombatants still go to war, and counselors note that battlefield medicine’s triage rules can themselves collide with conscience.

You must pick one. The regulations forbid granting one as a compromise for the other.

Two tracks

In service (any service member, including reservists): you apply under DoD Instruction 1300.06 and your branch’s regulation. The key rule is crystallization — your disqualifying beliefs must have become fixed after you joined. The process runs from written application through a chaplain interview, a mental-health evaluation, an investigating officer’s hearing, and a chain-of-command decision. It averages seven months and often runs close to a year. While it is pending you remain in the military and must obey lawful orders; obeying cannot be held against your claim — the regulation requires it — and refusing orders can cost you veterans’ benefits, invite court-martial, and suspend the application. Counselors’ first rule: complete the strongest application you can before telling your command. Command cannot impose a submission deadline, and notice of intent invites scrutiny. If deployment is imminent, put a brief written CO statement on record immediately and call a counselor.

Under a draft (registrants, if a draft is activated): there is no CO checkbox at registration and no way to pre-file. A claim can only be made after an induction order arrives — and the window is days, not weeks. That is the reason this page exists for you now: the writing you do today, dated and witnessed, is the claim’s foundation. A dated statement of beliefs, evidence of how you live them, support letters, and copies of everything to and from Selective Service — held in duplicate by someone you trust.

For what it’s worth, and it is not a promise: the Government Accountability Office counted roughly half of in-service applications approved from 2002 to 2006, and the Center on Conscience & War reports far higher rates among applicants who work with a counselor and persist.

The rest of this page is the work: the statement, the file around it, the decision, and the export.

The statement

Six questions, quoted word for word from the military’s own regulations. Three were dropped from the 2017 DoD instruction but are still required by the Navy, Marines, Air and Space Forces, and Coast Guard — and counselors advise every applicant to answer all six, because the burden of proof is yours. A seventh section here is not a regulation question; it is preparation for the questions people will ask you.

Write in your own words only. Write more than feels necessary — one counselor’s blunt version: “You will need to write more than seven paragraphs to convince them.” Draft, leave it for two days, come back. If a question stalls you, skip it and return. If writing is hard, say it out loud, record it, and transcribe. Everything you type is saved on this device as you go.

3.1  What you believe

“A description or explanation of the nature of the belief which requires the applicant to seek separation from Military Service or assignment to non-combatant training and duty for reasons of conscience.”

In plain terms: what do you believe about taking part in war?

Say what you believe, not what you oppose. The claim is about your personal participation — not a treatise on war, foreign policy, or how the country should defend itself. Frame the objection inside the larger thing you affirm: peace, the care of others, obedience to God, nonviolence — whatever it actually is for you. Political views held alongside conscience don’t disqualify you, but they cannot be the basis, so keep them out of the spine of the answer.

3.2  Where it came from

“A description or explanation of how the applicant’s beliefs changed or developed, to include an explanation as to what factors (how, when, and from whom or from what source training was received and belief acquired) caused the change in or development of conscientious objector beliefs.”

Start from what you believed when you joined — you answered “no” to the conscientious-objection questions on your enlistment paperwork — and show what changed. Name the sources: people, books, faith, weapons training, a deployment, becoming a parent, a death. Build a timeline first if it helps: the events in the order they happened, with month and year, and what each one changed in you. The more detailed the descriptions, the better.

3.3  When it became impossible

“A description or explanation of when these beliefs became incompatible with military service or combatant duties, and why.”

Counselors call this crystallization — the point your conscience said “no more.” Not everyone has a lightning moment; if yours built slowly, identify the point where it settled, as close as you can. If time has passed between that point and your application, explain the delay plainly. On the in-service track this answer carries the key legal rule: the beliefs must have become fixed after you joined.

3.4  Where you stand on force

“An explanation as to the circumstances, if any, under which the applicant believes in the use of force, and to what extent, under any foreseeable circumstances.”

This question invites two mistakes, in opposite directions. Claiming more than you hold — total pacifism you don’t actually live — hands the record an inconsistency the first time you’re probed. Claiming too loosely — violence is fine “as a last resort” — contradicts the claim itself. Defending yourself or your sister is not war. Think through the difference between police force and military force, and between violent and nonviolent force, before you answer, because interviewers will press attack scenarios whatever you write.

3.5  How your life shows it

“An explanation as to how the applicant’s daily lifestyle has changed as a result of these beliefs and what future actions are planned to continue to support these beliefs.”

Conduct is given substantial weight — this is where sincerity becomes visible. What you’ve joined, left, read, written, eaten, refused, volunteered for; what you plan to keep doing. Consistency is not the same thing as sincerity, but sincerity is reflected in it.

3.6  The one thing

“An explanation as to what in the applicant’s opinion most conspicuously demonstrates the consistency and depth of beliefs which gave rise to this claim.”

A counselor’s plainer version: what is the one thing that, more than anything else, shows you are really sincere? If the rest of the statement is the evidence, this is the closing line of it.

3.7  The hardest questions

Not from the regulations. This is preparation for the people who will test what you wrote: the chaplain, the investigating officer, a board.

If your beliefs took shape during a war that is in the news, expect the selective-objection probe. Work through the sequence honestly, in writing: What is wrong with the current war? What values make you think that? What would have to be true for a war not to violate those values? Could those conditions exist in any real war today? If your answer to the last question is no, your objection is to war in any form — say it that way, and keep the current conflict out of the center of your statement.

On hypotheticals — what would you have done about Hitler, what if your family were attacked — you are not required to have an answer. The Supreme Court itself: “Unwillingness to deny the possibility of a change of mind in some future, hypothetical circumstances may be no more than humble good sense, and casts no doubt on the [person’s] present sincerity of belief.” A thoughtful “I don’t know,” with the reason, beats anything evasive or flip. And whatever is asked, there is one anchor to return to: what am I able to do, personally, if called to fight in a real war?

There is a sharper way to prepare than imagining what might be asked. Quaker House — the peace witness beside Fort Bragg, listed under “Where to get help” below — has run draft-board simulations in its CO workshops for years, and its curriculum drills twelve sample questions, sorted by what each question is doing.

Open and direct. The only kind that lets you present your claim; these ask about the central criteria a board decides on.

  1. On what religious, moral, and/or ethical basis are you claiming conscientious objection?
  2. What led you to your objection? In what ways do you practice your beliefs? Can you demonstrate or document these?
  3. What does your faith community say about war and how do you justify any differences you may have with them?

Hypothetical — the “what ifs.” Outlandish by design; they deflect from your case. The Supreme Court line above is your ground.

  1. If someone held a gun to your mother’s or other loved one’s head, what would you do?
  2. If someone came at you or a nearby stranger ready to cause harm, what would you do? Can’t violence stop worse violence?
  3. During World War II, would you avoid war and let the Nazis kill more Jews? What about Russia’s invasion into Ukraine, killing thousands of innocent civilians, especially women and children?

Leading, framed, or biased. Built on an assumption the questioner brings. Name the assumption, then return to your claim.

  1. If the U.S. is attacked, would you come to its defense? What would you do instead of war? How do we defend ourselves?
  2. What gives you the right to claim this exception when soldiers before you died for the freedoms that keep you safe? Where is your American patriotic duty and obligation to your country?
  3. What if everyone claimed CO classification? How would you pacifists defend our country? You’re actually helping terrorists.

Baits, traps, and tricks. Meant to confuse and distract. Pause before you answer — a pause is not a weakness.

  1. Do you play or watch violent sports, video games, movies; do you own a gun, hunt, or eat meat; do you support abortion, etc.?
  2. Are you simply a coward afraid to die for your country?
  3. Would you serve as a medic? What if we offered you a desk job that kept you out of combat? If your claim is denied, are you prepared to go to jail?

Write out the questions you are most afraid of being asked — start with whichever of the twelve lands hardest — and your honest answers.

The complete file

The statement is item one. Counselors who have carried hundreds of these claims describe the rest of a complete file this way.

Where you stand

Read your own words against the three tests: war in any form; a religious, moral, or ethical basis; sincere and deeply held. No one here will score them. Where do you stand?

Whatever you chose, the next conversation should be with a counselor, not a website.

Take it with you

Print — the file as a clean document, for a counselor’s desk or a drawer. Printing to PDF is the same button.

Download Markdown — the file as plain text that anything can open, today or in twenty years.

Copy share link — the entire file encoded into the link itself. Nothing is uploaded anywhere; whoever you send it to sees exactly this page with your words in it. Treat the link like the document: anyone who has it can read it.

This page stores your work in this browser on this device — clearing browser data clears it. Export a copy when you’ve written anything you want to keep.

Who to take it to

Center on Conscience & War
Free expert CO counseling for both tracks since 1940; reviews draft applications; holds dated copies of draft-track files. 202-483-2220 · centeronconscience.org
Quaker House
CO discernment workshops, including a practice draft-board hearing. 910-323-3912 · quakerhouse.org
Your own congregation, meeting, or tradition
Official statements on war for the file, clergy letters, and in some traditions a CO registry that timestamps your beliefs.
Selective Service Alternative Service Program
Draft track only, after a 1-O classification. 703-605-4025
A civilian attorney
Allowed at the hearing at your own expense; the route to federal court after a denial. Find one through the counselors above.