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BAGRAM AIR BASE, Afghanistan (May 27, 2008) - The poem inscribed
on the Statue of Liberty beckons "Give me your poor, your tired,
your huddled masses longing to be free," but on this Memorial Day,
quite the opposite was true, as 44 members of the U.S. military
marched forward to become America's newest citizens.
In the presence of the Homeland Security Secretary Michael
Chertoff, U.S. Immigration Service Acting Director Jonathan
Scharfen and Army Maj. Gen. Jeffrey J. Schloesser, commander of
Combined Joint Task Force 101, 44 servicemembers from 21 countries
swore oaths of allegiance and became U.S. citizens.
"On behalf of President Bush and a grateful nation, I say,
'Welcome,'" Chertoff said to the new American citizens.
The ceremony brought the number of military men and women who
have gained citizenship while deployed to Afghanistan since
beginning the war on terror to 312, said Stacy K. Strong, deputy
district director of the U.S. Embassy in Bangkok, Thailand.
According to a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service fact sheet,
more than 39,000 servicemembers have become U.S. citizens since the
beginning of the war.
"There is no honor greater than presiding over an oath ceremony,
and there is no better place to do it than here," Chertoff said.
"You have all earned your citizenship through your service.
Starting today, America is as much your country as it is mine."
Under an executive order, legal permanent residents actively
serving in the U.S. military and honorably discharged legal
permanent residents who were on active duty on or after Sept. 11,
2001, are eligible to apply for naturalization.
"This feels really great -- closure to the 'history' chapter in
my life and the beginning of my future," said Army Pvt. Mark
Paguio, a Philippine native who led the other servicemembers in
their recital of the Pledge of Allegiance. "Becoming a U.S. citizen
has opened many doors," he said.
For the 44 servicemembers who are serving in Afghanistan in
support of Operation Enduring Freedom or the International Security
Assistance Force, the oath was an affirmation of what they have
worked so hard to secure.
"This day means everything to me," said Marine Lance Cpl. Artem
Starovoyt, a Ukraine native who now resides in Philadelphia. "I
have been out on the front lines doing what I can for my nation,
and now I can officially call America home."
The servicemembers who took the citizenship oath are from
Jamaica, Colombia, the Philippines, Peru, Nicaragua, Dominican
Republic, Australia, Poland, Ghana, Iran, Mexico, El Salvador,
Haiti, Sierra Leone, Trinidad and Tobago, Germany, Cuba, Nigeria,
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Ukraine.
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