Dayton Daily News

Mass killings avoided, U.S. government silent

- Armstrong Williams Armstrong Williams is the largest minority owner of broadcast television stations in the U.S.

We have all watched as the seemingly never-ending debacle of America’s 20-year failed experiment in Afghanista­n comes to a new chapter of policy failure and stupidity with no accountabi­lity from the United States government.

The core lesson? Competence and integrity in government matters; we have neither.

Recently, it was discovered that as many as 60 Taliban fighters in possession of at least one hand grenade boarded a flight from Afghanista­n en route to an unknown location in the United States. That flight, upon discovery of a hand grenade by an air marshal, landed somewhere, and passengers were deplaned.

The State Department quickly announced that evacuation flights were being suspended because of a measles discovery. The measles cover story evaporated like flash paper at a bookie off-track betting office.

The State Department opened the accountabi­lity and responsibi­lity deflection and blame game so skillfully practiced in Washington. They said the contractor, the pilots and crews of the contract aircraft are responsibl­e for this mishap, and is it their fault these unauthoriz­ed, poorly searched and improperly documented people were allowed on the flight for America. That, my friends, is chutzpah on an Olympic level! Let’s unpack this latest lie. First, the State Department should release and publish the aviation lift contract, the task order and statement of work to be performed. What is the contractor responsibl­e for?

Here are just some of the big issues that must be addressed when setting up evacuation flights from a conflict zone. First, contract pilots and aircraft crews are not responsibl­e for identifyin­g passengers, vetting travel documents or searching passengers before or as they are boarding the aircraft, nor is providing security on board during the flight. Why? Because these are sovereign state responsibi­lities.

Aviation contracts provide properly inspected (U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion standards of safety for flight operations) and U.S. certified and licensed pilots and crews. Whose job is it to identify passengers, vet travel documents, search and organize secure boarding procedures? The United States government. Is there a trusted, responsibl­e host country liaison service assisting the government on the ground in the conflict zone with vetting passengers and secure boarding procedures? It’s safe to say, no, this does not exist in Afghanista­n. So, is the State Department, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t or the U.S. military on the ground doing this? No.

Second, why are these emergency flights coming directly to America? This is a question the State Department should be asked. Historical­ly, the United States government has locations and agreements with allied nations for stopovers and thorough vetting of people fleeing conflict zones. One example from recent history: the processing operations run from Guam. The government has lifted thousands of displaced American citizens and Iraqis out of Iraq since Desert Storm in 1991. Guam has been used many times. It’s a safe, secure and supportabl­e layover location to get fleeing citizens and refugees settled down, properly identified and properly clothed, with infrastruc­ture to properly identify and replace missing or destroyed travel documents and to do medical checkups and quarantini­ng when required.

Why is this not being done for Afghanista­n? Because the secretary of state decided not to do it.

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