WASHINGTON/SALT
LAKE CITY (Reuters) - While neither of the candidates in next week's
U.S. presidential election was in the military, Mitt Romney's
age - he was eligible to serve in Vietnam - has raised questions during
the campaign about why he didn't serve and whether his Mormon faith had
anything to do with it.
Guy Hicks, a Mormon
and former officer in the Army Reserve Special Forces, said there is a
public misperception that members of the Mormon Church do not serve in the military.
"There is a sense
in our culture and in our religious belief that we have an obligation to
serve our country, and that's found in military service; it's also found in public service," said Hicks, a senior vice president at aerospace and defense firm EADS North America.
The participation of Mormons in the armed forces is
roughly equivalent to their proportion of the population; senior figures
in the Church served during World War II; and at least 10 Mormons have
won the Medal of Honor.
According to Pentagon records, nearly 18,200 military service members identified themselves as belonging to the Mormon Church
as of March, about 1.3 percent of the nearly 1.4 million active-duty
personnel. Around 2 percent of the U.S. population identify as Mormons.
Romney was a
19-year-old student at Stanford University in the spring of 1966 when
opponents of the military draft occupied a campus building. The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the formal name of the Mormon Church)
was a strong supporter of the Vietnam War, and the clean-cut young
Romney protested against the protesters. Photographs show him carrying a
placard saying: "Speak Out, Don't Sit In."
Rather than joining
the armed forces, however, Romney later that summer chose another path.
He obtained a deferment allowing him to avoid military service
and traveled to France to work as a missionary for his Church, a
traditional form of service for young Mormons. Romney's five sons all
followed in his footsteps, serving as missionaries but not soldiers.
Military service
used to be a crucial element of a presidential resume, adding gravitas
to the person applying for the job of commander-in-chief. But in recent
years it has become less of a requirement, and neither Obama nor Bill
Clinton served.
In the last election, Barack Obama,
who is 51, faced an opponent who was a Vietnam War hero, Senator John
McCain, and his predecessor as president, George W. Bush, served in the
Texas Air National Guard.
Mormon Church
members say the decision to enter the military, government or some
other form of service is a personal one. Those who do serve as
missionaries are considered officials of the Church, which qualified
them for a draft exemption.
"During the Korean
conflict and Vietnam War, the Church voluntarily placed restrictions on
the number of missionaries sent out from each ward. A bishop could
recommend one young man every six months for missionary service," said Mormon Church
spokesman Eric Hawkins. "Young men who had received induction notices
or whose draft number was likely to be called were not recommended for
missionary service."
BOYS TO MEN
Although Romney,
65, is not a veteran and is running against an incumbent whose
administration tracked down and killed Osama bin Laden, he heads into
Election Day on November 6 with strong support among the military and
veterans.
Polling by
Reuters/Ipsos during October found that active-duty military personnel
and their families support Romney over President Obama
by 49 percent to 43 percent. When military veterans and their families
are included, Romney led the president 53 percent to 38 percent.
Romney's wife, Ann,
told television interviewers recently that the decision by her husband
and sons not to serve in the military was unrelated to their religious
beliefs. Both Church missionary work and military service help young people to grow and mature, she said.
"My boys did all
serve missions, and they went away for two years," she said on the
television program 'The View.' "I sent them away boys and they came back
men ... and I think this is where military service is so extraordinary, too, where ... you are working and helping others. And that changes you."
She noted, however, that those who serve in the
military deserve particular respect for putting their lives on the line.MILITARY HISTORY
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints boasts plenty of former servicemen.
Church President
Thomas Monson joined the U.S. Navy as a teenager in the closing months
of the Second World War. Boyd Packer, president of the Quorum of the
Twelve Apostles, a Church governing body, was a bomber pilot in the
Pacific.
The Mormon
tradition of U.S. military service dates back to the Church's early
history following its founding by Joseph Smith and other leaders in
1830.
When war broke out between the United States and Mexico
in 1846, President James Polk asked Church leaders to raise a Mormon
battalion of some 500 troops, agreeing in exchange to support the
Mormons' move to the Salt Lake area. The Mormon battalion marched from
Iowa to Southern California, where it performed occupation and border
duties until it was disbanded in mid-1947. It never engaged Mexican
forces in battle.
Relations between
the Church and the U.S. government were tense in succeeding years. A
Church-backed militia known as the Nauvoo Legion nearly came to blows
with a U.S. military force sent to Utah Territory because of reports of a
Mormon rebellion.
In modern times, Church leaders have touted the United States as "God's country" and believe that its existence fulfills a prophetic destiny, said Patrick Mason, an associate professor who holds a chair in Mormon studies at Claremont Graduate University in California.
"Serving America is
only half a step removed from serving God," he said. Mormon solders in
Vietnam were basically told "you're doing God's work here strapping on
your M-16 - just like Mitt Romney is doing God's work strapping on his Book of Mormon every day," Mason added.