People have been pushing for some sort of tie-in featuring the adventures of Captain Robau aboard the USS Kelvin, which I fully support because I loved that the first captain we see onscreen in the Abramsverse is played by a Pakistani-American. That casting goes right to the heart of the diversity we're celebrating as part of the Star Trek franchise, taking "enemies" and showing them as heroes in an inclusive future.
He is the Chekov of our time.
Good point, but one could make a similar case for Alexander Siddig of DS9. Even before 9/11/01, Arabs were routinely stereotyped as terrorists in American TV and film, and DS9 came along just a couple of years after the first Gulf War. So for a Trek series to have an Arab character (played by an Anglo-Arab actor) as one of its primary heroes was a very progressive step, and one that I think doesn't get the recognition it deserves. In a way, it's a shame DS9 ended before 2001, because having a strong positive Arab role model on weekly television after 9/11 might've helped counter the xenophobia that erupted in its wake.