The Norwalk Hour

Immigrant soldiers denied U.S. citizenshi­p at higher rate

-

WASHINGTON — Immigrants serving in the U.S. military are being denied citizenshi­p at a higher rate than foreignbor­n civilians, according to new government data that has revealed the impact of stricter Trump administra­tion immigratio­n policies on service members.

According to the same data, the actual number of service members even applying for U.S. citizenshi­p has also plummeted since President Donald Trump took office, the U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services reported in its quarterly naturaliza­tion statistics.

“The U.S. has had a long-standing tradition of immigrants come to the U.S. and have military service provide a path to citizenshi­p,” said retired U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Paul Eaton, a senior adviser to the liberal veterans advocacy group VoteVets.org. “To have this turnaround, where they are actually taking a back seat to the civilian population, strikes me as a bizarre turn of events.”

According to the most recent USCIS data available, the agency denied 16.6 percent of military applicatio­ns for citizenshi­p, compared to an 11.2 percent civilian denial rate in the first quarter of fiscal year 2019, a period that covers October to December 2018.

The fiscal year 2019 data is the eighth quarterly report of military naturaliza­tion rates since Trump took office. In six of the last eight reports, civilians had a higher rate of approval for citizenshi­p than military applicants did, reversing the previous trend.

Attorneys for service members seeking to become citizens said new military immigratio­n policies announced by the administra­tion in 2017 and Trump's overall anti-immigrant rhetoric are to blame.

“I think people are dishearten­ed right now by the immigratio­n climate,” said Elizabeth Ricci, an attorney who is representi­ng immigrant service members. “We talk about a wall all the time. This is an invisible wall.”

Overall, the number of service members who apply to become naturalize­d citizens is just a fraction of the civilian applicatio­ns, but both pools have shrunk over the last two years. In the first quarter of the Trump administra­tion, January to March 2017 — which is the second quarter of fiscal year 2017 — there were 3,069 foreign-born members of the military who applied to become naturalize­d citizens. That same quarter, 286,892 foreignbor­n civilians applied.

In the first quarter of fiscal year 2019, USCIS reported it received only 648 military applicatio­ns for citizenshi­p, a 79 percent drop. For comparison, the agency received 189,410 civilian applicatio­ns, a 34 percent drop.

The Defense Department was repeatedly asked for comment by McClatchy, but did not provide a response.

USCIS officials said the drop in applicatio­ns is not due to any action by their agency, which processes the applicatio­ns as it receives them.

“The fall in military naturaliza­tion applicatio­ns is likely attributab­le in significan­t part to the Department of Defense's decision not to renew the Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest program after its expiration at the end of FY17,” USCIS said in a statement.

Immigrants who wish to join the U.S. military fall into three categories: legal permanent U.S. residents, commonly known as “green card” holders; foreign-born recruits with key medical or language skills who came to the United States under student, work or asylum visas and enlisted through MAVNI; and special status non-immigrant enlistees, who are residents of the Federated States of Micronesia, Republic of the Marshall Islands, and Palau.

The Trump administra­tion in 2017 announced major changes to the way the Pentagon would vet and clear foreign-born recruits and other overall changes to when a service member would qualify for naturaliza­tion.

The impact was felt across all three categories of recruits, said retired Army Reserve Lt. Col. Margaret Stock, an attorney who specialize­s in representi­ng immigrant soldiers in her private practice.

Immigrant enlistees previously could join basic training once a background investigat­ion had been initiated, and they could become eligible to start seeking citizenshi­p after one day of military service. Under the new policy, enlistees do not go to basic training until their background investigat­ion is complete, and they have to complete basic training and 180 days of service before they can seek citizenshi­p.

In the months that followed, the Defense Department shut down naturaliza­tion offices at some of its basic training locations, citing the new policy.

Other changes appeared procedural but had deep impact, such as the change that only higher-ranking officers, at colonel or above, were authorized to sign key USCIS forms verifying that an enlistee had served honorably. The signatures had to be original, too, which made it much more difficult for troops in outlier areas where the nearest colonel or higher-ranking officer may be hundreds of miles away, Stock said.

The new rules had a chilling effect, military immigratio­n attorneys said. Unit leaders who previously would have shepherded naturaliza­tion paperwork through for their service members have stopped doing so, the attorneys said.

“People are telling them ‘wait until you get to your first unit.’ When they get to the unit they are told, ‘we don't know anything about this anymore,'” Stock said.

The lack of guidance in units for immigrant soldiers “is all intentiona­l,” Ricci said. “It's part of this overall culture of ‘No.’”

The new rules have left some recruits waiting for years to serve.

Army recruit Ajay Kumar Jaina, 33, came to the United States from India in 2012 on an H-1B visa to work for Veritas Healthcare Solutions. He has a master's degree in pharmaceut­ical analysis and wanted to become a military pharmacist. In May 2016 he enlisted under MAVNI for his medical skills.

He's been in a holding pattern ever since. In the almost three years he's waited to go to basic training, he's reported for duty for more than 20 weekends with the 445th Quartermas­ter Company in Trenton, N.J.

He goes to New Jersey knowing that he will be unable to drill with the rest of the unit because he has not yet undergone basic training since the Defense Department has not completed his background check.

So his activities on base are limited to administra­tion and inventory roles.

“When I registered in the Army, at that time I was told my basic training location. I was told within six months my background check would be verified, and then I could go to basic and then (advanced individual training) then I could be come apply for citizenshi­p,” Jaina said.

Jaina said no determinat­ion has been made on his background check yet. “Which is actually good!” he said. “I can wait. I can keep my hopes high.”

Jaina's H-1B visa expires next month and he said he may have to go back to India in order to be able to return to the United States under a new visa as he continues to wait.

Eaton questioned why the Defense Department would make it more difficult to pull from eligible immigrant recruits, particular­ly in light of the recruiting challenges the military faces overall.

“Only 25 percent of the U.S. population is eligible to serve, due to academic, health or behavioral issues,” Eaton said.

Last year the Army missed its annual recruiting goal by more than 6,500 personnel. In a statement, the Army would not say whether the immigratio­n policies had impacted its ability to recruit last year.

“Our leaders remain confident that we have laid the foundation to improve recruiting for the Army while maintainin­g an emphasis on quality over quantity,” the Army said.

 ?? Paul Ratje / TNS ?? U.S. Army soldiers stand in support of fellow soldiers taking the oath to be U.S. citizens during a naturaliza­tion ceremony at El Paso County Coliseum on April 18 in El Paso, Texas.
Paul Ratje / TNS U.S. Army soldiers stand in support of fellow soldiers taking the oath to be U.S. citizens during a naturaliza­tion ceremony at El Paso County Coliseum on April 18 in El Paso, Texas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States