Why U.S citizenship isn’t required to be drafted into war as attacks on Iran continue

The fear is back, and this time it feels real. As U.S.–Iran tensions spike and whispers of World War 3 echo online, millions of young Americans are left staring at one terrifying question: “Will they come for me?” Rumors race ahead of reality. Politicians dodge. Parents panic. And buried in the cold language of federal law, a chilling mechanism quietly wa…

Beneath the noise and speculation, the truth is brutally simple: the draft never really died, it only went to sleep. The Selective Service System still tracks nearly every man aged 18 to 25, citizen and many immigrants alike, sitting like a loaded weapon in the legal code. One act of Congress and a presidential signature could turn that dormant database into marching orders. For those who never registered, the consequences are already real: blocked federal jobs, frozen financial aid, and immigration dreams denied before a shot is ever fired.

But the same law that threatens also spares. Conscientious objectors, clergy, ministry students, some visa holders, and sole surviving sons may find legal refuge if conscription returns. The haunting question is not whether the system exists—it does—but how quickly fear, politics, and war could bring it roaring back, forcing a generation to decide what, and who, they are willing to fight for.

 

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