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Army suspends discharges

The foreign-born recruits enlisted as part of a special program to U.S. citizenshi­p.

- By Paul Sonne

WASHINGTON — The Army is suspending discharges of foreign-born recruits who enlisted as part of a special military program that put them on the path to U.S. citizenshi­p, following lawsuits by soldiers who say they have been expelled unfairly and without explanatio­n.

In a July 20 memo, a top Army personnel official ordered the service to “suspend processing of all involuntar­y separation actions” for individual­s in the program and ordered a review of the discharge procedures for affected soldiers by Aug. 15.

Marshall Williams, acting assistant secretary of the Army for manpower and reserve affairs, also asked the Army deputy chief of staff in charge of personnel to recommend whether additional guidance should be issued regarding the discharge procedures for individual­s who enlisted through the Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest program.

The existence of the memo, which emerged in a court proceeding, was first reported Thursday by The Associated Press.

The Army’s decision to halt the discharges temporaril­y comes amid a raft of legal actions by soldiers who enlisted through the program and have now been discharged, potentiall­y complicati­ng their promised path to citizenshi­p.

The service issued the July 20 memo days after reversing its decision to discharge Lucas Calixto, 28, a reservist from Brazil, who entered the military through the program and sued the Pentagon because he faced an uncertain future in the United States owing to his separation.

The decision is the latest controvers­y surroundin­g a pilot program that the Pentagon establishe­d in 2008 offering expedited American citizenshi­p for foreignbor­n recruits with highly desired language and medical skills.

More than 10,000 recruits have enlisted in the U.S. military through the program, in some cases obtaining citizenshi­p by the end of their basic training.

It wasn’t clear if the Army suspension would lead to fewer MAVNI recruits being discharged in the future.

The Pentagon suspended the program in 2016 after judging that its procedures presented an unacceptab­le risk of insider threats including espionage and terrorism. The department ordered that those service members who enlisted through the program be subjected to enhanced security screening — a procedure that would be impossible for many of them to pass.

An increasing number of service members in the program have been receiving discharge orders since then. They have argued in court filings that they haven’t received proper explanatio­ns about why they are being pushed out or opportunit­ies to appeal the decisions.

Cynthia Smith, a spokeswoma­n for the Army, said in a statement that the service had suspended discharges of individual­s recruited through the program “in order to conduct a thorough review of the administra­tive separation process.”

“We continue to abide by all requiremen­ts to include completing a thorough background investigat­ion on all MAVNI applicants,” Smith said.

Maj. Carla Gleason, a Pentagon spokespers­on, said the required security screening can be difficult and time-consuming for MAVNI recruits because they are foreign nationals and the military has a limited ability to verify informatio­n in the individual’s home country.

Margaret Stock, a lawyer and retired lieutenant colonel in the military police, who helped create the program, said she thought the Army memo was a reaction to Calixto’s lawsuit and “an admission by the Army that they are violating the soldiers’ rights.”

“It violates Army regulation­s to discharge them without telling them why they are being discharged,” Stock said.

She said the program had been designed to recruit qualified immigrants and now the Pentagon was expelling them in some cases for having foreign relatives.

“It’s clear to me that they just want to get rid of people — and it looks like a good clean excuse to get rid of people to make it look like they failed a background check,” Stock said.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said last year that the Pentagon would like to find a way to save the program.

 ?? CALIXTO FAMILY ?? The Army reversed its decision to discharge Lucas Calixto, from Brazil.
CALIXTO FAMILY The Army reversed its decision to discharge Lucas Calixto, from Brazil.

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