As the end of the war in Europe became a reality, the US War Department began planning for the redeployment of Army personnel following the end of hostilities. The Readjustment Regulations were first introduced on September 15, 1944, and revised February 15, 1945, and again on March 5, 1945. The rules were simple in general principle: "those who had fought longest and hardest should be returned home for discharge first." The US Army divided units of the European Theater of Operations into four categories:
Units that had been overseas for less than one year, or those: to be redeployed directly to the Pacific; to be redeployed to the Pacific via the United States; to be returned to the United States to be placed in strategic reserve.
Dependent child under eighteen years old = 12 points each
Time of service was calculated from September 16, 1940. The four criteria were the only ones from which points were calculated. No points were issued for age, marriage, or dependent children over the age of eighteen. Battles and awards were also only accepted from a predetermined list.
Before the surrender of Japan, officers who may have had to serve again in combat were assessed not only on their ASR score but also on their efficiency and military specialities. Most high-scoring officers could have expected an early discharge after VE Day. The qualifying score was revised down to eighty points after VJ Day. In the coming months it would be lowered again.
Medical personnel
Scores varied before the end of May 1945 by varied department in the Medical Corps.
The discharge program continued until the end of July 1945; the demand to ship personnel and equipment to the Pacific became so great that medical units were prevented from shipping back to the United States for inactivation. However, all transfers to the Pacific were abruptly halted with announcement of the Japanese surrender on August 14, 1945.
Post-war changes
By September 1945, the War Department redesignated all units in Europe as either Occupation Forces, Redeployment Forces or Liquidation Forces who were required to close down former front line facilities such as munition dumps or field hospitals. Nevertheless, the ASR began to create problems for the US Army in post-war Germany as high-scoring personnel plus the attrition caused by sickness, compassionate leave and accidents meant continual loss of many experienced officers and NCOs. By December 1, 1945, a new policy was started, which was based on a combination of ASR score and length of service. The points required were as follows:
All enlisted men = 50 plus four years of military service
All enlisted women = 32 points
All enlisted fathers with three or more dependent children under 18 years of age were immediately eligible for discharge irrespective of their time in military service.