The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Thousands on U.S. military bases await resettleme­nt

Measles, medical, security screenings slowing process.

- Jennifer Steinhauer and Eileen Sullivan

WASHINGTON — Weeks after their dramatic escape from Kabul, tens of thousands of Afghans hoping to be resettled in the United States remain on military bases across the country and overseas as medical and security screenings slow the process.

A small but worrisome measles outbreak has contribute­d to the delays, causing a halt in evacuation flights as federal officials scramble to contain cases and inoculate new arrivals against the disease and other illnesses, including the coronaviru­s.

As of Tuesday, about 64,000 evacuees from Afghanista­n had arrived in the United States. The vast majority were at risk under Taliban rule after the U.S. withdrawal from the country last month. Nearly 49,000 are living on eight domestic military bases, waiting to be resettled in the United States, according to an internal federal document obtained by The New York Times. Roughly 18,000 are on bases overseas, largely in Germany. Some leave within weeks, but most stay longer.

The screenings, which involve an array of federal agencies, follow a condensed and harried evacuation effort last month shortly before the United States completed its withdrawal from Afghanista­n. About 100 Americans who want to leave, and an unknown number of vulnerable Afghans, remain in the country.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken defended the Biden administra­tion’s evacuation operation during hours of congressio­nal testimony this week, which included calls from Republican critics for his resignatio­n and charges that the administra­tion failed to adequately plan for the Afghan government’s collapse to the Taliban.

Blinken said there was no deadline for getting people out of the country and that “in the end, we completed one of the biggest airlifts in history, with 124,000 people evacuated to safety.”

While Afghan evacuees have escaped the Taliban, their lives remain in limbo, with restless children and little to do on the bases across

the United States, including Fort Mccoy in Wisconsin, where more than 12,700 people were being housed as of last week, and Fort Bliss in Texas, which has received more than 9,700.

“We will be here one month or more,” said Milad Darwesh, who arrived Saturday at Joint Base Mcguiredix-lakehurst in New Jersey after traveling for days to reach the United States. There are nearly 8,000 evacuees at the base.

Darwesh said he and his family narrowly escaped Kabul in a harrowing journey with the Taliban on their heels to the gates of the airport there. They spent four days in Doha, Qatar, along with thousands of other evacuees, with little water for drinking or washing. He and his family were then transporte­d to an airplane hangar at a base in Italy before finally making it to Fort Dix.

“It’s nice here,” said Darwesh, a former military translator who has been waiting for two years to have his visa processed. “We now have our own room.”

Refugee groups have scrambled for weeks to prepare for large numbers of Afghan refugees but so far have seen only a trickle of people ready to be resettled.

“In last few weeks, we served more than 100 people,” said Krish O’mara Vignarajah, CEO of Lutheran Immigratio­n and Refugee Service, a resettleme­nt agency that has affiliates in 22 states. “Some are coming with little more than a backpack. We know the importance of an orderly system that processes and prepares these new Afghan arrivals, helping them make informed decisions on where they ultimately want to resettle.”

 ?? GORDON WELTERS/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Temporary living facilities at Ramstein Air Base in Germany are housing Afghans hoping to be resettled in the United States. Roughly 18,000 are on bases overseas, largely in Germany.
GORDON WELTERS/NEW YORK TIMES Temporary living facilities at Ramstein Air Base in Germany are housing Afghans hoping to be resettled in the United States. Roughly 18,000 are on bases overseas, largely in Germany.

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