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ICE Drops Deportation Threat Against Chinese Student Joining U.S. Army

Immigration lawyer Margaret Stock displays a document sent to U.S. Army enlistee Shu Luo, threatening him with deportation.
Courtesy of Margaret Stock
Immigration lawyer Margaret Stock displays a document sent to U.S. Army enlistee Shu Luo, threatening him with deportation.

The Army has long had shortages of health care workers and speakers of certain languages, and in 2009 it started doing what other industries, including the medical field have done: It looked to skilled immigrants.

A program, called Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest or MAVNI, recruited thousands of foreigners already in this country who were seeking citizenship. But hundreds who signed up have been exposed to the risk of deportation — including Shu Luo, a Chinese recruit who was arrested in New Jersey last week.

Margaret Stock, a retired lieutenant colonel who helped create the MAVNI program for the army, says the military badly needs people like Luo, who has a masters degree in statistics from George Washington University.

"We need people who are fluent in Chinese and English, who have graduated from top universities in the United States, and who are loyal to the United States of America," says Stock, who became an immigration lawyer after leaving the military, and is representing Luo.

"He loves America. He wanted to serve in America," she said. "And he was very excited about being in the Army and using his tech skills to help the Army."

In 2016 the Defense Department put in place new, stricter background checks on immigrants, but the increased vetting has been taking so long that hundreds of recruits who had enlisted but not yet shipped out to boot camp — including Luo — were going to run out of time on their visas.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said earlier this year that he had been assured by the Department of Homeland Security that it would not deport MAVNI recruits, and hundreds were given an extension of their status. But according to sworn statements by Luo's recruiting officers, he was left out of that extension by mistake.

Luo was arrested and released last week, the Department of Homeland Security told NPR, and was told by the Army to apply to a correction board — which usually takes months if not years. But after NPR and Stars and Stripes reported on his story, his case seemed to be resolved.

The Pentagon says his enlistment status has been corrected, and ICE has confirmed it will not proceed with deportation.

Stock says that, if Luo had been deported back to China, he would have been in danger.

"He signed an oath to the United States, the standard enlistment oath, and that's an expression of a pro-American political opinion for which he would be persecuted," she said. "I'm sure he would be arrested, probably, at the very least."

Luo told NPR he's very happy he can stay in the U.S. where he feels a sense of freedom. Stock says Luo is keen to finally go to basic training — and that several other MAVNI recruits also were told recently that their cases have been corrected.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Quil Lawrence is a New York-based correspondent for NPR News, covering veterans' issues nationwide. He won a Robert F. Kennedy Award for his coverage of American veterans and a Gracie Award for coverage of female combat veterans. In 2019 Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America honored Quil with its IAVA Salutes Award for Leadership in Journalism.