Albany Times Union

Show loyalty to Afghans loyal to us

- By Trudy Rubin

Before the U.S. exit from Kabul, we heard fine White House words about saving Afghan allies who helped U.S. troops.

Yet the majority of the 18,000 Afghans applicants for special immigrant visas (known as SIVS) which were designated by Congress for translator­s and other military helpers, were left behind during the chaotic evacuation.

Yet the only rescue efforts underway for those in the SIV queue are being organized by private U.S. veterans’ groups and humanitari­an organizati­ons. These groups have to raise extensive funds for safe houses and for charter flights from Afghanista­n to Arab Gulf countries. They get no financial help from the U.S. government.

“We’re subcontrac­ting out our policy to private Americans and expecting them to pay for evacuation­s,” says former U.S. ambassador to Afghanista­n Ronald Neumann, “while sending Afghans into a situation where we have no clear policy as to whom we will admit.”

It’s long past time for the Biden administra­tion to show some loyalty to Afghans who showed loyalty to us.

They include people like N, whom I last spoke to in Kabul via Whatsapp, as he hid in a cold, rented room with no electricit­y, terrified because he’d heard that the Taliban was conducting house-to-house searches. An IT specialist, he worked with U.S. forces in Kandahar, while his wife, a women’s rights activist, and father, a lawyer, worked with U.S. military contractor­s in Kabul.

N was caught and badly beaten by Taliban who knew his and his father’s name, and told him he would pay for helping U.S. forces. He barely escaped.

But N, along with his wife and father, are in the early to middle stages of the SIV applicatio­n process.

With the U.S. embassy in Kabul shuttered, there is no way to finish the applicatio­n. Nor is it possible for SIV applicants to get to a U.S. embassy in a neighborin­g country when their names are on a Taliban list at the border.

So N and his family are in separate hiding places, uncertain how they will survive.

State Department spokesman Ned Price has claimed the department aims to “lend a degree of automatici­ty” to private charter flight operations, to facilitate the departure of “Americans, lawful permanent residents, and others to whom we have a special commitment from Afghanista­n.”

Say what? Price has also said there won’t be U.S. military evacuation flights, and there is no U.S. government offer to pay for private charters. Nor is there any indication the Biden team will accept

thousands of SIV applicants who haven’t finished the visa process.

This leaves the burden on volunteer groups like the the Special Operators Associatio­n of America. Its director, special forces vet Daniel Elkins, says they are trying “to help the Afghan brothers and sisters who fought alongside us,” by providing safe houses and helping them find a pipeline to safety.

Or Task Force Argo, made up of military veterans and nonprofit leaders. Organized by Jesse Jensen, a retired U.S. Army Ranger, and Iowa State Sen. Zach Nunn, also a veteran — along with a group of ex-military buddies — Task Force Argo has moved 2,120 people out on charters including 61 U.S. citizens.

“We continue to operate flights for those who served with or supported U.S. forces,” Jensen told me. But he’d like “a more robust relationsh­ip with the State Department.”

That means clear State Department guidelines are needed on how to channel SIV applicants, and Afghan military officer allies, into the pipeline for admission to the United States — as well as details on whom the United States is willing to admit.

Jensen would also like to see State working with NATO allies to facilitate third-country locations where SIV applicants would be safe while they are vetted.

As for who should pay for the charters: “That seems like the role of the U.S. government to honor promises made to people who served to protect our troops and worked for democracy. I look forward to the U.S. taking a more active role.”

But the frustratio­n was evident in Jensen’s voice, as well as that of Rep. Seth Moulton, an Iraq veteran and a leading voice among the bipartisan group of U.S. legislator­s who have pressed for getting SIV applicants out.

He was pleased at the appointmen­t of the skilled career ambassador A. Elizabeth Jones, who returned from retirement to coordinate Afghan relocation efforts.

The bottom line: The chaotic exodus from Afghanista­n left the bulk of translator­s and those who helped the U.S. military in dangerous limbo. It should not be left mostly to military veterans to fund and rescue those who fought alongside us. They should get maximum State Dept. assistance and funding.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States