.
On Latino Minds - Non-Citizen Soldiers in the Line
of Fire
Commentary,
Pilar
Marrero,
La
Opinio
The
angry reaction by Fernando Suarez del Solar, from Escondido, Calif., who
rejected the idea of applying for citizenship for his son Jesus, who
died March 27 in combat. Suarez has a big problem with this war and the
contradictions involved in sending into battle young men and women who
can't vote or hold military jobs that require security clearance.
LOS ANGELES--The war on Iraq has brought to the fore the plight of
non-citizen soldiers, who can die for their adoptive country but can't
vote, can't serve in positions of trust in the military and can't have a
military career longer than eight years.
According to the most recent estimates by the Department of Defense,
about 38,000 troops, some 3 percent of the U.S. armed forces, are not
citizens. One of the first casualties of the war was Jose Gutierrez, a
Guatemalan immigrant from California who was orphaned in Guatemala,
lived on the streets and traveled by cargo trains for thousands of miles
to cross the border illegally into the United States.
Since Gutierrez died in combat, another seven non-citizens have also
given their lives.
Lance Cpl. Gutierrez and Cpl. Jose A. Garibay were the first casualties
of the war to get their U.S. citizenship posthumously, a story widely
circulated in American media.
Much less publicized was the angry reaction by Fernando Suarez del
Solar, from Escondido, Calif., who rejected the idea of applying for
citizenship for his son Jesus, who died March 27 in combat. Suarez has a
big problem with this war and the contradictions involved in sending
into battle young men and women who can't vote or hold military jobs
that require security clearance.
"I rejected the idea because Jesus didn't want to become a citizen
when he had the chance, and I don't want him to get it posthumously
because to me that doesn't mean anything. It's just a benevolent act by
the U.S. government," Suarez told a reporter for La Opinion
newspaper in Los Angeles. "To me, it's like saying, 'Oh yeah, poor
thing, give it to him.'"
Yet it seems that being a non-citizen soldier may put you faster into
the line of fire. According to the Los Angeles Times, of the first 10
Californians killed in the war, five were non-citizens. One reason may
be the internal rules of the U.S. Armed Forces. In a recent article in
Hispanic Link news service, Sargent Oscar Villa, a U.S. Marine who
immigrated from Ecuador at age 14, explains why immigrants in the
military wear the same uniform but have "different options."
"Due to national security and many other restrictions, non-citizen
members of the military have only a small, select number of Military
Occupational Specialties (MOS) to choose from when enlisting or
re-enlisting. In all service branches, immigrants and non-citizens are
over-represented in the field of infantry... They are most likely to be
called first to the front lines," Villa wrote.
The reason? Non-citizens can't get a security clearance. It's the same
reason why thousands of people almost lost their jobs after 9/11 as
baggage handlers and security screeners in U.S. airports, after a new
law made it illegal for non-citizens (even those with papers) to hold
those jobs. A judge later dismissed that measure as unconstitutional.
Being a non-citizen has become a dicey prospect for many immigrants in
the past few years. Coming to America legally, even getting a green card
(permanent residency card) is not enough to make one feel protected by
the laws and the constitution.
Back in the mid-1990s, when the issue of "illegal" immigrants
was hot nationwide and the undocumented had become a scapegoat for the
society's economic woes and social ills, federal law stripped legal
immigrants of the possibility of receiving help when they fell into hard
times: they were prohibited from getting food stamps and other social
programs.
After Sept. 11, the civil rights of immigrants were the first to go in
the name of the "war against terrorism." Non-citizens lost
jobs and constitutional protections. Non-citizens were held for
questioning for months without the U.S. government releasing any
information about them.
Non-citizens suspected of terrorism faced military tribunals, while
citizens such as John Walker Lindh, suspected of the same crime, faced
civil courts.
But the U.S. wants non-citizens in the Armed Forces: last year, President
Bush signed an executive order making green card holders immediately
eligible for citizenship if they signed up for service. It was a reward,
he said, to those serving in the war on terrorism.
After that, the number of enlisted non-citizens started to grow, said
Dan Kane, spokesman for what was formerly known as the Immigration and
Naturalization Service and now is the Bureau of Citizenship and
Immigration Services, an arm of the Homeland Security Department.
Between July and February, 5,441 military personnel applied to become
citizens.
Believing this was their chance to cross the border legally, hundreds of
Mexicans started showing up at the U.S. Embassy in Mexico to offer to
fight for the United States in exchange for American citizenship. They
were turned away, disappointed that they were required to cross the
border first, become a legal resident and then enlist in the military,
much like Jose A. Gutierrez from Guatemala did.
U.S. Marine Jesus Alberto Suarez, from Tijuana, Baja California, will
become a posthumous citizen despite his father Fernando's strong
feelings about it, and for the same reason many other immigrants have
become citizens in the past: the fear of losing rights.
It was reported recently by La Opinion newspaper that Jesus Suarez's
widow, Seane Suarez, accepted the benefit for the security of their
15-month-old son Erik. "She decided to apply for posthumous
citizenship because you never know about immigration laws, and she's
afraid that their son might lose some rights for being an immigrant's
son," Fernando Suarez said.
Marrero (Pilar.Marrero@laopinion.com) is a political editor and
columnist for La Opinion, the nation's largest Spanish newspaper.
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