amindwalker, it seems with the ASR program that there is virtually no chance of being deployed. I'll be done with my commitment before I finish residency, and residents, according to this thread, are non-deployable. There is I suppose the chance that a major increase in military activity could cause them to change residents' non-deployable status. In actuality, all American men have a military service obligation of 8 years whether you sign up or not. If something so drastic happened to cause residents to lose their non-deployable status, it's likely that other physicians who didn't even sign up for the military would be called upon (drafted) to fulfill their 8-year MSO as happened with lots of physicians during Vietnam. My point being that while there is a small chance that I could be deployed if I I sign up for ASR, there is a comparably small chance that I could get deployed if I avoid the military altogether. So the way I see it, being an ASR doesn't really change your chances of deployment all that much as long as you don't take any of the extra stipends that incur commitment time beyond residency. Thoughts?