Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Redirect billions of dollars to Afghans

- The following is from a New York Daily News editorial:

In an executive order last month, President Biden moved to divide and release $7 billion from Afghanista­n’s central bank – funds frozen after the Taliban takeover of the country. Half would go to meet urgent Afghan humanitari­an needs, and half would be disbursed to a subset of U.S. terrorism victims’ families who’d recently won claims against the Taliban in Manhattan federal court. Biden’s split of the baby fails on two accounts.

First, if one accepts that some of the money should aid American victims of terror, the sum should not be parceled out to a small group that won judgments against the Taliban for facilitati­ng the Sept. 11 attacks – excluding most 9/11 families and many victims of other Taliban crimes. It should be disseminat­ed through the U.S. Victims of State Sponsored Terrorism Fund, set up by Congress in 2015 to ensure equitable distributi­on of recovered cash to terrorism victims.

The bigger problem is that Biden is redirectin­g money that isn’t his to redirect. The funds were property of the Afghan people.

As U.S. troops left and the Taliban swarmed in, it made sense for America to freeze these accounts to prevent the bad guys from exploiting them. And it makes sense for Biden now to look for a way to get some of the trove around the Taliban and straight to Afghans, who face acute risk of starvation.

What isn’t fair is to claim half of the sum for Americans. We champion the interests of 9/11 families. But these funds didn’t belong to terrorists or to a government that sheltered them. They belong to the 40 million citizens of an impoverish­ed nation, a people desperate for help.

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