- Lodge-Philbin Act
The Lodge-Philbin Act was a U.S.
law , passed on30 June 1950 , which allowed for the recruiting of foreign nationals into a military force, fighting under the command of the U.S. armed forces. The Act permitted initially up to 2,500 non-resident aliens (later expanded to allow up to 12,500) to enlist. If they successfully served five years with an honorable discharge, they were guaranteed U.S. citizenship. [See Public Law 597, “An Act to provide for the enlistment ofaliens in the Regular Army,” 2nd Session, 81st Congress.]The Act was pushed through Congress by
Massachusetts Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. during the Cold War, looking especially for recruits from Eastern Europe (theSoviet Bloc ) to form infiltration units working in that part of the world. More than 200 Eastern Europeans qualified before the Act expired in1959 . No German nationals or citizens of countries of theMarshall Plan or ofNATO were eligible. [See brief comment in the article at http://www.cfr.org/publication.html?id=7861.]Members of this force, who died during active service or from injuries or illness during active service - and were inducted or sent to U.S. territory at least once - were entitled to posthumous citizenship. Applications could be filed as recently as November 2004 (or within 2 years of their death). [See
Department of Homeland Security Form N-644, at http://www.ilw.com/forms/n-644.pdf.]For comparison, note that during
World War II , aliens who served just three years were entitled to citizenship.The military was not interested in recruiting on a large scale from overseas.President
Dwight Eisenhower is quoted in a 1951Time Magazine article as saying, "When Rome went out and hired mercenary soldiers, Rome fell." [See Time Magazine article from April 2, 1951, found at http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,814485,00.html] [See article by James Jay Carafano, "Mobilizing Europe's Stateless" at http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~hpcws/carafano.pdf] .ee also
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International Brigades
*French Foreign Legion Notes
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