Daily Camera (Boulder)

Plight of Afghan allies tests Biden’s vow

- By Ellen Knickmeyer, Julie Watson, Bernard Condon and Padmananda Rama

WASHINGTON — Evacuation flights have resumed for Westerners, but thousands of at-risk Afghans who had helped the United States are still stranded in their homeland with the U.S. Embassy shuttered, all American diplomats and troops gone and the Taliban now in charge.

With the United States and Taliban both insisting on travel documents that may no longer be possible to get in Afghanista­n, the plight of those Afghans is testing President Joe Biden’s promises not to leave America’s allies behind.

An evacuation flight out of Kabul on Thursday, run by the Gulf state of Qatar and the first of its kind since U.s.-led military evacuation­s ended Aug. 30, focused on U.S. passport and green card holders and other foreigners.

For the U.S. lawmakers, veterans groups and other Americans who’ve been scrambling to get former U.S. military interprete­rs and other at-risk Afghans on charter flights out, the relaunch of evacuation flights did little to soothe fears that the U.S. might abandon countless Afghan allies.

A particular worry are those whose U.S. special immigrant visas — meant for Afghans who helped Americans during the 20year war — still were in the works when the Taliban took Kabul in a lightning offensive on Aug. 15. The U.S. abandoned its embassy building that same weekend.

“For all intents and purposes, these people’s chances of escaping the Taliban ended the day we left them behind,” said Afghanista­n war veteran Matt Zeller, founder of No One Left Behind. It’s among dozens of grassroots U.S. groups working to get out Afghan translator­s and others who supported Americans.

An estimated 200 foreigners, including Americans, left Afghanista­n on the commercial flight out of Kabul on Thursday with the cooperatio­n of the Taliban. Ten U.S. citizens and 11 greencard holders made Thursday’s flight, State Department spokesman Ned Price said. Americans organizing charter evacuation flights said they knew of more U.S. passport and green-card holders in the northern city of Mazar-e-sharif and elsewhere awaiting flights out.

In the U.S., National Security Council spokespers­on Emily Horne said Thursday’s flight was the result of “careful and hard diplomacy and engagement” and said the Taliban “have shown flexibilit­y, and they have been businessli­ke and profession­al in our dealings with them in this effort.”

But many doubt the Taliban will be as accommodat­ing for Afghans who supported the U.S. In Mazar-eSharif, a more than weeklong standoff over charter planes at the airport there has left hundreds of people — mostly Afghans, but some with American passports and green cards — stranded, waiting for Taliban permission to leave.

Afghans and their American supporters say the Taliban are blocking all passengers in Mazar-e-sharif from boarding the waiting charter flights, including those with proper travel papers.

Zeller pointed to the Taliban appointmen­t this week of a hard-line government. It includes Sirajuddin Haqqani, who is on the FBI’S most-wanted list with a $5 million bounty for alleged attacks and kidnapping­s, as interior minister, a position putting him in charge of granting passports.

The Trump administra­tion all but stopped approval of the Afghan special immigrant visas, or SIVS, in its final months. The Biden administra­tion, too, was criticized for failing to move faster on evacuating Afghans before Kabul fell to the Taliban.

The U.S. had also required some visa-seekers to go outside the country to apply, a requiremen­t that became far more dangerous with the Taliban takeover last month.

“There are all of these major logistical obstacles,” said Betsy Fisher of the

Internatio­nal Refugee Assistance Project, which provides legal services to SIV applicants. “How will people leave Afghanista­n?”

She said with no clear plan in place, the U.S. government could wind up encouragin­g people to go on risky journeys.

In July, after Biden welcomed home the first airlift, he made clear the U.S. would help even those Afghans with pending visa applicatio­ns get out of Afghanista­n “so that they can wait in safety while they finish their visa applicatio­ns.”

Since the military airlifts ended on Aug. 30, however, the Biden administra­tion and Taliban have emphasized that Afghans needed passports and visas. State Department spokesman Ned Price said Thursday the administra­tion was looking at steps like electronic visas.

Hundreds of Afghans who say they are in danger of Taliban reprisals have gathered for more than a week in Mazar-e-sharif, waiting for permission to board evacuation flights chartered by U.S. supporters.

 ?? Karim Jafaar / Getty Images ?? Evacuees from Afghanista­n wait for passport checks upon arrival at Hamad Internatio­nal Airport in Qatar’s, capital, Doha on Friday.
Karim Jafaar / Getty Images Evacuees from Afghanista­n wait for passport checks upon arrival at Hamad Internatio­nal Airport in Qatar’s, capital, Doha on Friday.

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