10/26/2011 05:05:00 PM EST
US Army Bars Dual US Citizens from Most Jobs
"Earlier this year, the US Army issued a revised personnel regulation in which the Army announced that dual citizens of the United States and another country are not permitted to enlist in the Army, Army Reserve, or Army National Guard into jobs that require a security clearance “unless they already possess a security clearance.” The regulation is important because it potentially bars millions of Americans from most Army jobs:
The vast majority of Army jobs require a security clearance–including
officer appointments, Special Forces, Military Intelligence,
and Military Police jobs, but also most others.
Dual citizenship is something that millions of Americans possess, often inadvertently. Whether a person holds citizenship in a particular country is a matter of that country’s law, not U.S. law, and one’s citizenship is thus not always within the control of the individual or the United States Government. Although some countries allow their citizens to expatriate, others do not.
Some people are dual citizens because their parents or
grandparents hold citizenship in a foreign country; others are dual
citizens because they were born in another country. The U.S. Office of
Personnel Management has published “Citizenship Laws of the World,” a
document that explains the wide variety of rules regarding
citizenship. Although this document is not completely up-to-date (some
countries have changed their laws since it was published), it can give a
reader a good idea of the potential problems posed by the Army’s
personnel regulation. According to OPM, for example, the country of
Iran considers the children of male Iranian citizens to be Iranian
citizens as well, and prevents them from renouncing Iranian
citizenship–so any US-born child of an Iranian citizen is necessarily a
dual citizen of the United States and Iran, and can’t rid himself of
Iranian citizenship. Should the US Army bar a young American of Iranian
descent from serving in the US Army Special Forces, merely because his
father is an Iranian immigrant to the United States? One would hope
not.
The Army’s regulation preventing all dual US citizens from enlisting
in most Army jobs is a much broader bar than the military has previously
applied. Previously, dual citizenship did not prevent enlistment into any job and
did not automatically bar a person from holding a security clearance;
instead, security officials would evaluate each person’s case
individually. Ironically, famous Americans such as George Washington,
John F. Kennedy, John Shalikashvili, Marco Rubio, and even Barack Obama
would likely have been barred from serving in most Army jobs had they
attempted to join the US Army at a time when this regulation was in
effect.
The rule barring dual citizens from enlisting in most jobs also cedes American sovereignty to other countries, because it lets foreign countries control who can serve in the US Army. As
discussed above, a foreign country–not the United States–determines who
is a citizen of that country. When a foreign country determines that
an American holds its citizenship, that American necessarily is a dual
citizen of that country and the United States. Barring these dual
citizens from enlisting thus lets foreign countries use their
citizenship laws to control which Americans can serve in the
Army. Allowing foreign laws to control who gets to enlist in the US
Army is clearly not in America’s national security interest. Let’s hope
that Army leaders reconsider their new rule at the first opportunity." - Margaret Stock, Oct. 26, 2011.