The Mercury News Weekend

Mattis: Immigrant servicemem­bers won’t face deportatio­n

- By Lolita C. Baldor The Associated Press

WASHINGTON » The nearly 850 immigrants currently serving in the military or waiting to start basic training won’t face deportatio­n despite the ongoing federal wrangling over the fate of people who came to America illegally as children, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said Thursday.

Mattis said he spoke with Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen earlier Thursday in what he described as a “confirming call” and was told that those military members and all veterans who were honorably discharged will be safe unless they have committed a serious felony or a judge had issued a specific deportatio­n order for them.

President Donald Trump said in September that he was terminatin­g the Deferred Action for Child- hood Arrivals program, or DACA, which provided protection from deportatio­n for people brought to America as children who are now living here illegally.

Previously, U.S. officials have said the military members’ DA CA status wasn’t clear. But on Thursday Mattis said flatly it’s not a problem.

“They will not be subject to any kind of deportatio­n,” he told reporters. “In terms of the DACA situation ... it’s clarified they are not in any kind of jeopardy.”

Mattis added that Homeland Security has been always willing to work with the Pentagon on DACA issues, and he said, “We would always stand by one of our people.”

All of those DACA service members came in under a small, special recruiting program called Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest, that seeks people with particular­ly critical skills. Many of them are fluent in key languages, including various Afghan and Iraqi dialects or perhaps Russian or Chinese.

Last September, the administra­tion said people whose DACA status expired before March 5 could apply for renewal, which essentiall­y gave Congress six months to come up with a legislativ­e fix. A federal court ruling, meanwhile, blocked Trump’s move, prompting the U. S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services to say it was once again accepting and processing DACA renewals.

That case leaves open the question as to whether someone could enlist in the military and then seek protection from any subsequent deportatio­n move.

Congress continues to struggle to find a legislativ­e solution. House Mi- nority Leader Nancy Pelosi staged a record-breaking, eight-hour speech in hopes of pressuring Republican­s to allow a vote on protecting the hun- dreds of thousands of socalled “Dreamer” immigrants.

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