Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Army halts its purge of immigrants

- MARTHA MENDOZA AND GARANCE BURKE

The U. S. Army has stopped dischargin­g immigrant recruits who enlisted seeking a path to citizenshi­p — at least temporaril­y.

A memo shared with The Associated Press spells out orders to high-ranking Army officials to stop processing discharges of men and women who enlisted in the special immigrant program.

“Effective immediatel­y, you will suspend processing of all involuntar­y separation actions,” a memo signed July 20 by Marshall Williams, acting assistant secretary of the Army for manpower and reserve affairs, said.

The disclosure comes one month after the Associated Press reported that dozens of immigrant enlistees were being discharged or had their contracts canceled. Some said they were given no reason for their discharge. Others said the Army informed them they’d been labeled as security risks because they have relatives abroad or because the Defense Department had not completed background checks on them.

In a statement Thursday, Army Lt. Col. Nina Hill said they were halting the discharges in order to review the administra­tive separation process. The decision could

affect hundreds of enlistees.

“We continue to abide by all requiremen­ts to include completing a thorough background investigat­ion” on all recruits, she said.

The Army has reversed one discharge, for reservist Lucas Calixto, 28, a Brazilian who had sued. Nonetheles­s, discharges of other immigrant enlistees continued. Attorneys sought to bring a class- action lawsuit last week to offer protection­s to a broader group of reservists and enlistees in the program, demanding that prior discharges be revoked and that further separation­s be halted.

A judge’s order refers to the July 20 memo and asks the Army to clarify how it affects the discharge status of Calixto and other plaintiffs.

As part of the memo, Williams also instructed Army officials to recommend whether the military should issue further guidance related to the program.

Margaret Stock, an Alaska-based immigratio­n attorney and a retired Army Reserve lieutenant colonel who helped create the immigrant recruitmen­t program, said Wednesday that the memo proves there was a policy.

“It’s an admission by the Army that they’ve improperly discharged hundreds of soldiers,” she said. “The next step should be go back and rescind the people who were improperly discharged.”

Discharged recruits and reservists reached Thursday said their discharges were still in place as far as they knew.

One Pakistani man caught by surprise by his discharge said he was filing for asylum. He asked that his name be withheld because he fears he might be forced to return to Pakistan, where he could face danger as a former U.S. Army soldier.

The reversal comes as the Defense Department has attempted to strengthen security requiremen­ts for the program, through which historical­ly immigrants vowed to risk their lives for the promise of U.S. citizenshi­p.

President George W. Bush ordered “expedited naturaliza­tion” for immigrant service members after 9/ 11 in an effort to expand military ranks. Seven years later the Military Accessions Vital to

the National Interest program became an official recruiting program.

It came under fire from conservati­ves when President Barack Obama added Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipients — young people who were brought to the U.S. as children and are now in the country illegally — to the list of eligible enlistees. In response, the military layered on more security clearances for recruits to pass before heading to boot camp.

President Donald Trump’s administra­tion added even more hurdles, creating a backlog within the Defense Department. Last fall, hundreds of recruits still in the enlistment process had their contracts canceled.

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