The Denver Post

152 Afghan trainees go AWOL in U.S.

- By Robert Burns

At least 152 Afghans sent to the United States for military training during the course of the war against the Taliban have gone AWOL, and the problem, which worsened last year, is unlikely to improve soon, U.S. inspectors said Friday.

AWOL Afghans are considered a security risk in the U.S. because they have military training and are of fighting age, and relatively few are ever arrested or detained, according to a report by the Special Inspector General for Afghanista­n Reconstruc­tion.

The relatively high AWOL rate among Afghan trainees, particular­ly since 2015, also has undermined the combat readiness and morale of Afghan military and police units, the report said.

The AWOL rate among Afghans is far higher than

Afghan prison guards flee Colorado program.

Five Afghanista­n prison officials have fled from the same prison training program in Cañon City in the past four years. Three officials fled in August. The other two fled in September 2013 and February 2014. Colorado prison officials said the men did not pose a terrorist or security threat. Although 36 nations have sent prison officials to Cañon City for tactical and strategic training, only Afghan officials have ever fled. for other foreign national trainees. Of 2,537 Afghan trainees brought to the U.S. since 2005, 152, or 6 percent, have gone absent without leave, the report said. The rate for trainees from all other countries in that period was less than 1 percent.

Nearly all the Afghans who fled since 2005 were officers. Most were what the military calls “company grade” officers, meaning they were at the rank of lieutenant or captain.

The prevalence of this group to abandon training posts is “particular­ly alarming,” the report said, given the officers’ important role in maintainin­g the readiness of the Afghan military.

The Afghans have fled from posts across America, including Lackland Air Force Base in Texas, where they are required to take English-language training; Fort Rucker, Alabama; Fort Benning, Georgia; Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, and Fort Huachuca, Arizona.

The report cited numerous bureaucrat­ic impediment­s to catching AWOL Afghans. They are required to provide limited biographic­al and background informatio­n while in the U.S., which can make it difficult to track them down, it said.

Most training is done in Afghanista­n, but selected Afghans are brought to the U.S. each year for training and education opportunit­ies that cannot be offered in their home country, the report said.

The AWOL problem is one of many that have dogged the U.S. effort to make the Afghan military capable of defending itself. As of July, the U.S. has spent $68 billion to train and equip the Afghan army, air force, commandos and other security forces. The report reviewed data only through March of this year.

But in asserting that the problem remains of concern, inspectors noted that the State Department reported that four AWOL Afghan trainees were caught by Customs and Border Protection in Washington state in August.

In response to the report, the State Department told the inspectors that the number of AWOL cases was “unacceptab­ly high.”

Investigat­ors’ interviews with Afghans in the U.S. for training and with some who were granted asylum after going AWOL in previous years show that they feared for the safety of their families in Afghanista­n after receiving threats from the Taliban for cooperatin­g with Americans.

The report said that as of March 7, 13 of the 152 who had gone absent without leave since 2005 were still at large. Seventy of the 152 had fled the United States; 39 gained legal status in the U.S.; and 27 were arrested, removed or in the process of being removed from the U.S. Three no longer were AWOL or returned to their training base in the U.S.

In response to the report, Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., sent a letter to Defense Secretary Jim Mattis asking for more details. “The majority of these Afghan military trainees have been located, but the fact that any of them remain unaccounte­d for is deeply concerning and it’s important we get more informatio­n on how this happened and what’s being done to locate these individual­s,” she wrote.

McCaskill is the top Democrat on the Senate Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee.

The worst years for the AWOL problem were 2009, 2015 and 2016 — years that coincided with higher reported levels of violence in Afghanista­n, the report said.

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