Immigration activists are complaining that a move by the White House to open up limited military positions to undocumented immigrants is too little, too late.
On Thursday, the Department of Defense announced it would open up an existing program for legal immigrants, Military Accessions Vital to the National Interest, to undocumented immigrants who have qualified for deportation relief through the administration’s deferred action program.
But activist groups, who have long called on Congress and the White House to allow DREAMers to serve in the military, say the move will likely benefit only a handful of undocumented immigrants. Recruits qualify primarily by demonstrating “critical language and culture skills” in 44 languages for which there’s high demand for skilled speakers. Examples include Arabic, Urdu, or Swahili. Spanish is not among them. The number of recruits is capped at 1,500 per year.
“We’re not going to leave anyone behind,” said Cesar Vargas, a prominent DREAMer activist who has proclaimed his desire to join the military. “There’s other talented young DREAMers with other critical skills that the military needs who should have the opportunity to serve the country they call home.”
After the White House delayed a planned overhaul of immigration policy until after the midterm election, groups like United We Dream are trying to keep pressure on President Barack Obama to grant broader relief from deportations and to provide more access to institutions like the military.








