The Columbus Dispatch

US soldier wins long fight to get Afghan translator asylum

- Julie Watson

Army combat veteran Spencer Sullivan has never felt more victorious.

Sullivan spent years fighting to get his Afghan translator asylum after his former platoon’s other interprete­r was denied a U.S. visa before being killed by the Taliban in 2017.

On Wednesday, Abdulhaq Sodais was finally granted asylum by a court in Germany, where he was forced to flee after being denied a U.S. visa repeatedly despite facing death threats for aiding U.S. troops during its 20-year war in Afghanista­n.

Sullivan, who now lives in Virginia, said he dropped his phone when he saw the text message from Sodais.

“I just started crying,” Sullivan said. The decision marked the end of an eight-year journey between the two men who risked their lives together trying to eliminate the Taliban, bonding in a way that can only be forged in war.

Sullivan dedicated himself to helping Sodais after losing another translator, Sayed Masoud, who was killed by the Taliban in 2017 while waiting for a U.S. visa. The former soldier is among scores of U.S. combat veterans who have been working on their own to rescue the Afghans who served alongside them.

“It’s ultimately just cathartic relief,” said Sullivan, adding that he was overwhelme­d with emotion Wednesday in part because it also opened the war wound that he couldn’t help Masoud. “This long journey is over but Sayed didn’t make it.”

Thousands of Afghans who aided U.S. troops have spent years stuck in a backlogged and beleaguere­d U.S. Special Immigrant Visa program, and countless others were denied because of minor inconsiste­ncies in their work records, such as showing up late to their jobs, according to veterans who worked with them.

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