The Signal

Immigrant Recruits Cast Aside by Trump

- Steve and Cokie Roberts can be contacted by email at stevecokie@gmail.com. Their commentary is distribute­d by Andrews McMeel Syndicate.

As a child in eastern China, Panshu Zhao worshipped the United States. “He read the Bible his parents gave him, watched Hollywood movies and studied the ideals of democracy,” reports the Associated Press. “He jumped at the chance to attend graduate school at Texas A&M University.”

In 2016, Zhao enlisted in a special U.S. Army program that offers a path to citizenshi­p for immigrant recruits with special medical and language skills — from Albanian to Yoruba. He pursued his degree in geography, hit the gym to prepare for boot camp and trained with his reserve unit.

But now, the Trump administra­tion has essentiall­y dismantled the program, dischargin­g recruits like Zhao and ending their dreams of becoming Americans.

“It’s just like you’re dropped from heaven to hell,” Zhao told the AP. “I’m not a national threat. On the contrast, I’m a national merit because people like me with higher education and critical skills, we want to serve this great U.S. Army.”

Trump has consistent­ly, even proudly, proclaimed his hateful attitude toward immigrants, deriding them as “rapists” and “animals” who “infest” and “invade” this nation. He’s advocated barring all Muslims from the country, and slashed the number of refugees accepted for resettleme­nt by two-thirds.

But one of his most despicable actions has been to strangle the program that initially welcomed Zhao, called Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest, or MAVNI. His administra­tion has set such high standards for security clearances that many recruits either fail the test or run out of time, since their eligibilit­y ends if they’re not called up for active duty within two years of enlistment.

Margaret Stock, a retired Army officer who helped create the program and now practices immigratio­n law, says the background checks for MAVNI recruits are much tougher than for job applicants at the White House. “There’s no explanatio­n for this except xenophobia,” Stock told The New York Times.

Xenophobia is definitely one explanatio­n. So is Trump’s relentless determinat­ion to ignore facts when he’s stirring up his base with anti-immigrant invective. Zhao is right: The program’s recruits are “national merits,” not threats, and the enhanced security standards imposed by the Trump administra­tion are clearly not justified by reality.

The program has recruited more than 10,000 new soldiers since its inception in 2009. A 2017 report by the RAND Corporatio­n, reports the Times, “found that the program’s recruits were generally better educated and better performing than the average enlisted soldier. It also found that there had been no instances of terrorism or espionage connected to an immigrant recruit.”

Trump’s mendacity has real consequenc­es for real people. Alina Kaliuzhna, originally from Ukraine, enrolled in MAVNI with dreams of becoming a nurse and a commission­ed officer. But her career plans are now jeopardize­d by Army screeners who labelled her a security risk.

“You’ve committed your life to a bigger purpose, and anybody who’s willing to do that deserves respect and (to) be treated as human, not as a piece of paper,” Kaliuzhna told CBS.

The threat to young people like Kaliuzhna goes well beyond the loss of a job. To be eligible for MAVNI, recruits have to hold a valid visa — for work, study or travel. But those permits will eventually run out, and without the protection of military service, the recruits could be deported.

An Iranian who joined the program after coming to the U.S. to study engineerin­g told the AP that he was proud of “pursuing everything legally and living an honorable life.” The immigrant, who is afraid to give his real name, has been devastated by his discharge.

“It’s terrible because I put my life on the line for this country, but I feel like I’m being treated like trash,” he says. “If I am not eligible to become a U.S. citizen, I am really scared to return to my country.”

This is life in Trump’s America. Even legal immigrants who want to serve the country and live honorable lives are being “treated like trash” by an administra­tion whose policies are both profoundly immoral and totally self-defeating.

As the Defense Department’s own website points out, “Noncitizen­s have served in the military since the Revolution­ary War.”

MAVNI was created because it serves the national interest. And it is being jettisoned just at a time when the military is consistent­ly failing to meet its own recruitmen­t goals.

Instead of welcoming and utilizing these recruits, this administra­tion is finding every excuse to break promises, break lives and besmirch the “ideals of democracy” that Panshu Zhao admired so avidly as a child in China.

This is life in Trump’s America. Even legal immigrants who want to serve the country and live honorable lives are being “treated like trash” by an administra­tion whose policies are both profoundly immoral and totally self-defeating.

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