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In the Army, is it possible these days to get a discharge under honorable conditions?

And what 'honorable' conditions would be allowed??

My daughter's boyfriend left the military a year ago for a family hardship, and now the issues have been resolved so he wants back in. My husband who was in the Navy doubts this story, but says he's heard the military has changed since he's been in. He says it typically doesn't work that way.

The young man has had a heck of a time trying to get the local recruiting office to "re" enlist him. He claims they keep "loosing his paperwork". Your thoughts?

Update:

please read the second sentence...what conditions does the military considerable honorable?

Update 2:

he was only in for about a year total.

Update 3:

he is 20 - says he received a general discharge under honorable conditions. My daughter is only 18. I just have a feeling something's not right with his story.

7 Answers

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  • 10 years ago
    Favorite Answer

    If he got discharged for family hardship, and had a bad track record, then he could get a General discharge under honorable conditions. It means he wasn't quite good enough for an Honorable Discharge, or not bad enough for an General under other than honorable.

    That being the case, it will be extremely hard for him to get back in with the military force reduction in progress. The recruiter might be trying hard, or this kid might be blowing smoke. You're a mom, go with your gut.

  • 10 years ago

    Almost everyone gets an honorable discharge from service. But that is at the conclusion of their enlistment.

    When he got his early discharge he was given a re-enlistment code which either allows or disallows him to re-enlist. My thought would be that the problem with the recruiting station is probably the boyfriend. The recruiter has the option of telling him to go away we don't need you or to process him. If he hasn't told him to go away then he has no reason to "lose his papers". Re-enlistment is however very difficult and the Army has no reason to go the extra effort to take someone who has already failed for whatever reason. Good luck!

    Source(s): 26 years active Army service.
  • Anonymous
    10 years ago

    To answer your question, all it means is that he FINISHED his time in the military at the time he promised. For instance he signed up for a 4 years enlistment--he did his 4 years, and he was discharged. That is how you get an "honorable discharge". It is nothing special. He did his time and was released on time.

    If he was kicked out of the service--a DUI, rape, or if he is AWOL, he would get a Less then honorable discharge, or something like that.

    Source(s): For the part of them claiming to "loose his paperwork". No. He is lying to you. They are denying him. There are a ton of new recruits trying to enlist. Why should they take a guy who had problems and left, when there are thousands of new people with no problems/clean history trying to get in? They will say no all day.
  • Anonymous
    10 years ago

    since it was a hardship discharge under honorable condition there will be a lot of work to see if he can get back in but i dont think so also what re code he got plus if he thinks he can get a wavier for it wont happen n nothing has change that much

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  • Mrsjvb
    Lv 7
    10 years ago

    it is nearly IMPOSSIBLE to get back in no matter what your Discharge code was. RE1s with no issues and no need for waivers cannot get back in. he most likely has an RE3( waiver necessary to re enlist) due to the reason he got out in the first place.

    all discharges are Honorable unless you screw up.

  • 10 years ago

    To your basic question, yes. The vast majority of discharges are honorable. The guy is old enough to pursue this, and does not need to be dogged by you.

  • Anonymous
    10 years ago

    Of course its possible.

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