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Armed Forces Service Medal

Award of the United States military


Award of the United States military

FieldValue
nameArmed Forces Service Medal
imageArmed Forces Service Medal.png
image_size115px
captionObverse
presenterthe Department of Defense and Department of Homeland Security
typeService medal
eligibilityU.S. military personnel
establishedJanuary 11, 1996
awarded_forParticipating in a designated U.S. military operation that did not encounter foreign armed opposition or imminent hostile action
statusActive
firstawarded(retroactive to June 1, 1992)
higherMexican Border Defense Medal (2025)
lowerHumanitarian Service Medal
image2[[File:Armed Forces Service Medal ribbon.svgborder106px]]
caption2Service ribbon
reverse[[File:Armed Forces Service Medal Reverse.jpg100px]]

The Armed Forces Service Medal (AFSM) is a military award of the United States military that was created on January 11, 1996, by President Bill Clinton under . The AFSM is a deployed service medal that is presented to those service members who engage in "significant activity" for which no other U.S. campaign or service medal is authorized.

Appearance

The Armed Forces Service Medal is a round bronze medal 1+1/4 in in diameter. The obverse of the medal bears a demi-torch, as held by the Statue of Liberty, with rays radiating from behind the torch. Encircling at the top is the inscription ARMED FORCES SERVICE MEDAL. The reverse bears the eagle found on the United States Department of Defense seal. Below is a laurel wreath with the inscription IN PURSUIT OF DEMOCRACY at the top.

The suspension and ribbon of the medal are 1+3/8 in wide and consists of the following edge stripes from outside edge to the center: 1/16 in goldenlight, 1/8 in jungle green, 1/8 in green, 1/8 in mosstone green, and 1/8 in goldenlight. The center stripe is 1/4 in wide in bluebird.

Criteria

The Armed Forces Service Medal is the non-combat parallel of the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal which is normally awarded for combat operations and other combat support missions.

The AFSM may be awarded to service members who, on or after June 1, 1992:

  • Participate, or have participated, as members of U.S. military units, in a designated U.S. military operation deemed to be a significant activity.
  • Encounter no foreign armed opposition or imminent hostile action.

The term "significant activity" is determined by theater commanders and is normally deemed to be participation in a U.S. military operation considered to hold a high degree of scope, impact, and international significance that the operation warrants the presentation of a permanent service medal.

Service members must have been permanently assigned, attached, or detailed to a unit that deployed to participate in a designated U.S. operation within the area of eligibility for 30 consecutive days (or for the full period when an operation is less than 30 days) or for 60 non-consecutive days.

Aircrew members must have participated as a regular assigned crew member on an aircraft flying into, out of, within, or over the area of eligibility in direct support of the designated military operation for 30 consecutive days or 60 non-consecutive days. One day of service is credited for the first sortie flown on any day. Additional sorties flown on the same day receive no further credit.

The AFSM may be authorized for U.S. military operations for which no other U.S. campaign or service medal is appropriate such as:

  • Peacekeeping operations
  • Prolonged humanitarian operations
  • U.S. military operations in direct support of the United Nations (UN) or the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and for operations of assistance to friendly foreign nations. The award is only appropriate if the NATO, UN, or foreign operation involves a concurrent U.S. military support operation.

The AFSM is not authorized for participation in national or international exercises. For operations in which personnel of only one military department participate, the AFSM will be awarded only if there is no other suitable award available to the department.

; Additional awards and devices: One award of the Armed Forces Service Medal is authorized for each designated military operation. Only one AFSM is awarded for multiple deployments for the same designated operation. Subsequent awards are denoted by wearing a bronze service star on the AFSM suspension and service ribbon. A silver service star is worn in lieu of five bronze service stars.

Approved operations

Area or OperationStart dateEnd date
Operation Maritime Monitor1 June 19921 December 1992
Operation Provide Promise2 June 199215 February 1996
Operation Deny Flight12 April 19932 December 1995
Operation Sharp Guard15 June 199320 September 1996
Task Force Able Sentry in support of United Nations Preventive Deployment Force12 July 199331 March 1999
Operation Uphold Democracy1 April 199531 January 2000
Operation Joint Endeavor20 November 199519 December 1996
Operation Provide Comfort1 December 199531 December 1996
Operation Joint Guard20 December 199620 June 1998
Operation Joint Forge21 June 19982 December 2004
Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita relief efforts27 August 200527 February 2006
Operation Jump Start15 May 200615 July 2008
Operation Unified Response14 January 20101 June 2010
Operation United Assistance16 September 201430 June 2015
Operation Oaken Steel12 July 201626 January 2017
DoD Support to Customs and Border Protection including Operation Faithful Patriot7 April 2018TBD
COVID-19 response31 January 20201 June 2023
Capital Response I & II and the Presidential Inauguration6 January 202123 May 2021
Operation Allies Refuge (OAR) & Allies Welcome (OAW)31 August 20211 April 2022

As an exception to Department of Defense policy, the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal and the Armed Forces Service Medal may be awarded concurrently for Operations Joint Guard and Joint Endeavor. While Operation Sharp Guard was conducted during the Bosnia War, the Veterans of Foreign Wars refuses to accept Veterans of the Bosnian War who received the Armed Forces Service Medal.

References

References

  1. (2016). "Issuances".
  2. "Army Regulation 600–8–22 Military Awards". Army Publishing Directorate.
  3. "Campaign and Service Medals". Office of the Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Army.
  4. Harkins, Gina. (2019-08-19). "Troops Who Deployed to the US-Mexico Border Are Getting a Medal".
  5. "Directives Division".
  6. "Armed Forces Service Medal (AFSM) – Authorized Operations". Office of the Under Secretary for Personnel and Readiness.
  7. "Troops Who Responded to COVID-19 Crisis Are Now Eligible for These Medals". UMilitary.com.
  8. [https://web.archive.org/web/20230504032259/https://www.hrc.army.mil/milper/23-093/] army.mil] Approval of the AFSM- OAR issued 16 March 2023
  9. (22 September 2023). "Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal (AFEM) – Authorized Operations". United States Department of Defense.
  10. "Public Law 105-85 Sec. 572". Government Printing Office.
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