Fighting for What Was Promised
Immigrants have served in the U.S. military since our nation’s founding. Immigrants serve not only honorably but exceptionally: 20% of all Congressional Medal of Honor recipients are immigrants. Despite this exceptional service, the United States government has deported hundreds if not thousands of its own veterans over the past few decades alone and continues to do so to date. In response to the cruelty of this practice and building on extraordinary organizing by deported veterans themselves, advocates have long sought a mechanism for deported veterans to repatriate.
This report chronicles the resounding success of these advocates’ tireless efforts to repatriate deported veterans — first piecemeal, and then via the Immigrant Military Members and Veterans Initiative (IMMVI) established during the Biden Administration. Launched July 2021, 138 deported veterans returned home to the United States under IMMVI. Each veteran was granted humanitarian parole, which allowed them to return temporarily (typically for one year) to the United States to reunite with their families, obtain V.A. healthcare, and work on restoring their immigration statuses. A small number of veterans also paroled in their spouses or children. Of these 138 veterans, roughly half restored their Lawful Permanent Resident status (“green cards”) or naturalized (became U.S. citizens), allowing them to remain in the United States permanently.