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Military entry exam sites close, reduce the hours due to Hegseth prohibition of civil travel

Military entry exam sites close, reduce the hours due to Hegseth prohibition of civil travel

This is a last -minute news and will be updated.

The locations set up throughout the country to give military entry exams to the potential recruits were forced to close or reduce the hours due to the defense secretary Pete Hegseth, stopped using government trips, according to a notification and E -edition revised by Military.com.

Army managed the military entry test program that is designed to help recruitment and facilitates the administration of admission exam, known as the vocational aptitude battery of armed services or Asvabto potential recruits for all military branches. The service did not immediately provide information on closed locations and reduced operating hours, but the changes were recently announced by the process of processing the US military entry.

“Suspension of travel with civilian employees has affected military entry test operations (MET),” A Facebook post by the military entry processing command announced on Friday. The order said that it is “performing the analysis to determine which MET sites can remain operational using alternative means.”

As a result of Hegseth’s stop for civil travel, potential recruits must now travel to a military entry processing station to do the test that is a critical prerequisite for registration, which in some parts of the country could mean leading for many hours.

When asked about stopping, Hegeseth officials referred to Militar.com to a memory written by Darin Selnick, who fulfills the duties of the secretary for staff and training, this was issued on March 5 and has restricted almost all civil travel.

Related: Pentagon Caps Civilian Governing of Tax cards to 1 dollar, limits travel as part of Trump cuts

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