In the early morning hours of May 12th, about a dozen Iraqi insurgents ambushed a small Army outpost in the village of  Quarghouli in the Sunni Triangle. With a volley of rocket-propelled grenades and small arms fire it wasn’t long before they overwhelmed the seven soldiers from the 10th Mountain Division.

By the time a relief force reached the site, four US servicemen and their Iraqi Army interpreter lay dead.  The fate of the other three soldiers was unknown, but there was evidence that they had been abducted.  Within hours, a group calling itself Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia announced that it was not only responsible for the ambush, but was holding the three missing Americans.

A massive search effort was initiated utilizing 4000 US soldiers, 2,000 Iraqi troops, helicopters, search dogs and FBI interrogators. In the following days the manhunt was massive, homes were searched , canals drained, hundreds interrogated, and many arrested …but still no sign of the missing soldiers. Two more servicemen lost their lives in the search effort, but to no avail

Eleven days later, the body of 20-year-old private first class, Joseph Anzack, of Torrance, California, was found about 30 miles down river floating face down in the Euphrates. He had been shot multiple times and there were signs of tortured.

The fate of the two other missing servicemen – Alex R. Jimenez, a 25-year-old specialist from Lawrence, Massachusetts, and Byron R. Fouty, of Waterford, Michigan, a 19-year-old private who had been in Iraq only a few weeks, – is still unknown.

It’s against this backdrop that we now learn that Jimenez’s wife, Yaderlin, whom he married in 2004, is facing deportation.

Yaderlin Hiraldo, is a native of the Dominican Republican who first met her husband during his childhood visits to the island, but according to her attorney, Matthew Kolken,  the 22 year old had entered the U.S. illegally prior to marrying him. It was when he requested a green card and legal residence status for her, that authorities were first alerted to her situation.

Despite Spec. Jimenez’s status as a US citizen and active duty serviceman, the fact the Yaderlin had entered illegally meant that she would now have to return home and wait ten years before reapplying.

“I can’t imagine a bigger injustice than that, to be deporting someone’s wife who is fighting and possibly dying for our country,” said  Kolken in an interview with a local TV.

An immigration judge has put a temporary stop to the proceedings since Spec. Jimenez was reported missing. The soldier’s wife is now living with family members in Pennsylvania.

U.S. forces continue to search for Spec.Jimenez, 25, and a comrade, Pvt. Brian Fouty, 19, of Waterford, Mich.

The soldiers’ identification cards were found in an al-Qaeda safe house north of Baghdad, along with video production equipment, computers and weapons, the U.S. military said Saturday. An al-Qaeda front group claimed in a video posted on the Internet earlier this month that the soldiers were killed and buried, and showed images of the ID’s. The video offered no proof of their fates.

Link

This sad case goes to highlight one of the biggest problems with the current discussions revolving around immigration reform. All too often we hear opponents of reform digging in their heels and talking tough about the “rule of law.”

 How often have we heard about their opposition being limited to “illegal” immigrants while claiming support for those who “do it the right way.”  They like to try to compartmentalize immigrants, and immigrant families into these two very black and white groups. The “good” immigrants” who wait their turn and the “bad immigrants” who enter improperly. But it’s not so cut and dry.

As anyone who truly knows anything about the current immigrant experience can attest, the lines are hazy at best.

Within families, there can be all gradations of legality from citizens, to LPR’s to the undocumented all living under the same roof. Husbands and wives with different status. Siblings, parents, aunts, uncles or cousins, all having differing legal status.  

In a system that can leave legal permanent residents waiting ten years to bring in children or spouses and naturalized citizens up to twenty to bring in a sibling or parent, it is no wonder that even the most “law abiding” immigrant has someone close to them that is at constant risk of arrest and deportation.

This situation appears to be lost on those opposed to immigration reform.

During last years marches and rallies that brought millions into the streets to protest for reform, those from the right insisted on calling the demonstrations “illegal allien marches”, or “illegal immigrant demonstrations.”  As if to imply that only those who are “law breakers” would be demanding reform.

But this could not be further from the truth. This issue effects the lives of many whom Lou Dobbs or Bill O’Rielly would deem “good immigrants” …..”good immigrants”  like Spec. Alex Jimenez.

0 0 votes
Article Rating