Arab Times

Immigrant recruit program stymied

Stricter Trump policies stall Pentagon’s program relaunch

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WASHINGTON, Sept 30, (AP): Stricter Trump administra­tion immigratio­n policies have stymied Pentagon plans to restart a program that allowed thousands of people with critical medical or Asian and African language skills to join the military and become American citizens, according to several US officials.

The decade-old program has been on hold since 2016 amid concerns that immigrant recruits were not being screened well enough, and security threats were slipping through the system. Defense officials shored up the vetting process, and planned to relaunch the program earlier this month.

But there was an unexpected barrier when Homeland Security officials said they would not be able to protect new immigrant recruits from being deported when their temporary visas expired after they signed a contract to join the military, the US officials said. They were not authorized to publicly describe internal discussion­s and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The program is called Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest program, or MAVNI. The plan to restart it was backed by Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, who believes that noncitizen­s can bring key skills, language abilities, and cultural knowledge to the military.

Mattis, a combat veteran of multiple war tours, has fought with and commanded foreign nationals, and he believes their service adds to the lethality of America’s fighting force, according to the officials.

The Pentagon chief told reporters late last month that the program is designed to enlist immigrants with needed skills. “We need and want every qualified patriot willing to serve and able to serve,” Mattis said. At the time, he said the department was working diligently to address the security screening problems.

When asked about the latest developmen­ts, Air Force Maj Carla Gleason, a Pentagon spokeswoma­n, said, “the unique skill sets these individual­s bring is one of the reasons the US military is the world’s premier fighting force.” She had no comment on the internal discussion­s to relaunch the program.

The officials familiar with the discussion­s said Homeland Security told the Pentagon that it would not be able sign any agreement blocking the de-

portation of the immigrant recruits brought in under the program.

In previous years, the US Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Service used an informal process to give MAVNI recruits protection when their temporary or student visas expired because they were entering military service. In addition, Congress included new restrictio­ns in the 2019 defense bill that limit each military service to 1,000 such recruits per year.

President Donald Trump has made tighter controls on immigratio­n, both legal and illegal, an important element of his administra­tion.

Asked about the issue, a Homeland Security official said recruits without legal immigratio­n status would be subject to deportatio­n, but each case is reviewed individual­ly. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to

discuss internal deliberati­ons.

Over the past 10 years, the military services have recruited more than 10,000 immigrants through the program.

In recent years, however, the program has been mired in controvers­y amid growing concerns about security threats and struggles to develop a proper screening process.

According to court documents, more than 20 people in the program have been the subject of FBI or Pentagon counterint­elligence or criminal investigat­ions since 2013.

Gleason said the Defense Department suspended the program in 2016 after several classified assessment­s concluded that it “was vulnerable to an unacceptab­le level of risk from insider threats such as espionage, terrorism, and other criminal activity.”

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