From Yahoo/NYT:
“These U.S. Veterans Won't
Rest Until They've Kept a Wartime Promise”
(Bruce Hemp in Staunton, Va., on
Sept. 11, 2021.)
Rex Sappenfield does not sleep
well. A former Marine who served in Afghanistan, he is tormented by the fate of
his interpreter, an Afghan with a wife and three young children to whom
Sappenfield made a battlefield promise: We will never abandon you. Now a high
school English teacher who tries to instill a sense of rectitude in his
students, Sappenfield has thought about his pledge every day since the United
States pulled out of Afghanistan on Aug. 30. “We broke a promise, and I just
feel terrible,” Sappenfield, 53, said. “I said it to the faces of our Afghan
brothers: ‘Hey, guys, you can count on us; you will get to come to the United
States if you wish.’ ”
But if the U.S. has withdrawn
from Afghanistan, Sappenfield and many other veterans have not. He is part of
an informal network — including the retired general who once commanded his
unit, retired diplomats and intelligence officers, and a former math teacher in
rural Virginia — still working to fulfill a promise and save the Afghan
colleagues who risked their lives for America’s long fight in Afghanistan. The
network has evacuated 69 people from 23 families from Afghanistan since
mid-August. But 346 people from 68 different families remain on its list of
endangered Afghans, including the interpreter, whom Sappenfield regards as a
brother. He says the interpreter kept his unit alive in Helmand province “by
telling us where to go, and where not to.” Every day, Sappenfield is in contact
with the interpreter, who went into hiding after the Taliban took control of
the country in mid-August and for security reasons is being identified only as
P, the first letter of his given name. He hid in Kabul for nearly a month,
before the network managed to shepherd him, in a harrowing 15-hour bus ride, to
another city in Afghanistan. As of this week, P is waiting for a possible
charter flight out as he is shuttled between safe houses. “The Taliban can
easily spot us in this area because we are not from this part of Afghanistan,”
he wrote to Sappenfield this month.
In pulling out of Afghanistan,
President Joe Biden declared that he would not pass the conflict to another
president and another generation. He would bring closure. But the shambolic
withdrawal and the failure to evacuate thousands of now threatened Afghans
whose help was essential to the U.S. effort have only deepened the alienation
felt by many veterans. Sappenfield’s emotions rise and fall with each message
from P, who tried and failed three times to reach the Abbey Gate, one of the
Kabul airport’s main entries, during the U.S. evacuation. “I tell my students
in 11th grade that they are the only ones who can betray their integrity,”
Sappenfield said. “It’s theirs to give away if they choose to lie or cheat. But
in this case, someone else broke my word for me. It just irritates the heck out
of me.”
If Not Me, Then Who? Did our
service matter? The question gnawed at Lt. Gen. Lawrence Nicholson as he
drafted a letter in August to the men and women with the 2nd Marine
Expeditionary Brigade who fought alongside him in Afghanistan. “Nothing,” he
wrote, “can diminish your selfless service to our nation.” Nothing — not
the Taliban’s sweeping takeover after two decades of war, not the desperate
Afghans falling from planes, not disbelief that Afghanistan had fallen
overnight to the same enemy that the U.S. had vanquished 20 years ago. “I
felt I had to say to the guys, ‘Hey, get your heads up,’ ” said Nicholson, who
retired as a three-star general in 2018. Recalling the 92 Marines who died
under his command in Helmand province, the 2,461 American service members
overall who died in Afghanistan and the untold treasure lost, he wrote to his
fellow Marines: “You raised your hand and said, ‘IF NOT ME, THEN WHO?’”
The letter was dated Aug. 17.
Soon after, one of the recipients posted it on LinkedIn, and it quickly
circulated onto veterans’ chat groups, where anguished questioning was already
being aired about how the U.S. withdrawal could be squared with a core Marine
creed: Leave no one behind. Nicholson’s letter ended with a hint that, in fact,
some Marines were honoring that code. “You may be interested to know we are
working through several channels to provide safe passage out of Afghanistan,”
he wrote. One of the channels was run by Jack Britton Jr., a retired Marines
intelligence officer who served with Nicholson in Iraq and had gone into
corporate security in Texas. On the encrypted messaging app Signal, Britton had
set up a group called “Support-HKIA” — an acronym for Kabul’s Hamid Karzai
International Airport. “#DigitalDunkerque,” he wrote. Quickly, an informal
rescue operation came together, sometimes interacting with other such informal
networks. “Jack was the master facilitator,” Nicholson said. The master
coordinator, though, was Bruce Hemp, 67, a retired math teacher and grandmother
who lives with her husband on a farm in Staunton, Virginia. She had met
Nicholson in 2007 and soon was organizing friends to put together care packages
for his Marines. From 2011, she began organizing an annual party — or muster,
as the Marines call it — at her farm.
Now the same people who gathered
there were the nexus of an Afghan evacuation network. “The key takeaway,” Hemp
said, “is just how let down they feel by the government not helping these
people who saved American lives umpteen times.” Working with the Signal group,
Hemp compiled a manifest of 400 at-risk Afghans, which included passport and visa
application details, the names of U.S. sponsors as well as phone numbers for
Afghan mechanics, interpreters and translators. Her farm became a command
center, with phone calls and messages pouring in. From the fall of Kabul on
Aug. 15, the network worked with soldiers and intelligence officers on the
ground in Afghanistan. She showed The Times a list of Afghan names, including
large families, a few marked in purple with the words “GOT OUT!!!” “She is the
den mother with her Cub Scouts,” Sappenfield said.
A Cup of Milk Tea For the
U.S. service members trying to evacuate Afghans and others at the Kabul
International Airport, the low point came Aug. 26, when a suicide bombing
killed 13 U.S. service members and 170 Afghans. That day, an Afghan man,
Matiullah Matie, his wife and their six children stood near the Abbey Gate
holding a sign that read “Chesty Puller.” For Marines, that seemingly odd name
was not odd at all; Chesty Puller was a Marine Corps hero for his exploits in
World War II and Korea. Matie was a businessman in Helmand province who
for several years worked as a facilitator and fixer for Nicholson. Now he held
the Chesty Puller sign aloft — an idea from Maj. Mike Kuiper, an active-duty
Marine who had served in Helmand. Spotting that sign, a Marine stationed
at the airport pushed Matie’s family through the gates to safety. Later, Matie
and his family were evacuated to Ramstein Air Base in Germany, where they were
housed for more than a month in a tent while awaiting transport to the U.S. “When
a Marine approached me in the crowd, I had the password on my phone, which that
day was a photo of a cup of milk tea,” Matie said in a phone interview. “My
Marine brothers saved me.” On Oct. 14, Matie and his family were flown
to Philadelphia from Germany. “Reached Philadelphia airport safely thanks to my
American brothers and sisters who helped me,” he wrote in a jubilant message.
In a leafy subdivision in Knoxville, Tennessee, Nicholson has been working
closely with an Afghan American, Par, whose mother, brother and pregnant sister
had just arrived after a terrifying journey from Afghanistan coordinated by the
Marines network.
Par had worked for the U.S.
Defense Department in Kabul, gotten to America in 2014 and then joined the
Army, where he is now a sergeant in the army reserve. When Kabul fell,
Nicholson helped arrange for his family to reach the Kabul airport after a
20-hour bus ride from Herat in western Afghanistan. At the airport gates, Par’s
brother held up an agreed-upon sign: “MY BROTHER WORKS FOR THE U.S. ARMY.” An
American quickly waved them inside, where they spent four days before being
flown to Qatar, then to Bulgaria, then to Germany and finally to Dulles
International Airport near Washington. Par was waiting. Par asked to be
identified only by his given name because he still has four sisters and a
brother, as well as his father, stuck in Afghanistan. He laughed when asked
about the Taliban 2.0 theory, the idea that time and diplomatic experience had
mellowed a movement known for its harsh repression of women and mass
executions. “They are playing us. I cannot believe there are some people who
actually believe them. My brother, who worked for the United States government,
will probably disappear and never be seen again.”
The U.S. evacuated more than
100,000 Afghans before withdrawing from Kabul, but many had never worked for
the U.S. while thousands who did remain. Many veterans remain fixated on why
generals or presidents have not been held accountable for a lost war. They
asked whether their buddies gave their lives so that the Taliban could march
unopposed into Kabul. One Marine, who requested anonymity because he is still
in the service, put it this way: You lose two rifles at the Camp Lejeune
Marines training base and the entire chain of command is relieved. But you lose
tens of billions of dollars’ worth of weapons now in the hands of the Taliban,
13 service members (10 of them Marines) in the Aug. 26 terrorist attack at
Kabul airport, and you lose America’s longest war, and there seems to be no
reckoning. “Among Americans there is no shared scar tissue from the wars,” said
J. Kael Weston, a retired foreign service officer who served in Iraq and
Afghanistan alongsideNicholson and has been part of the network. “A culture gap
opened up.” In rural Virginia, Hemp and others are still working to save more
Afghans. She has three young grandchildren and doesn’t have to do this, given
that many Americans have already forgotten Afghanistan, or scarcely paid
attention to it before. “I was raised with the Golden Rule, an honor code,” she
said. “You do not lie to people. You honor your promises.” She looked out at
her crabapple tree and the rolling green fields. “People today don’t want to
take responsibility for their actions. ‘Choices have consequences’ is now
‘choices have consequences for everyone but me.’ People are just so angry.”
‘Sorry This Is So Murky and
Chaotic’ On many days, Sappenfield speaks on Zoom with P. They exchange
videos of their children but more often they talk about fear and frustration.
The fear is about the Taliban. The frustration is with the Department of State,
which has been slow-walking P's visa application for many years. “They
are not taking any action,” P said in a Zoom call. “I feel hopeless. I feel I
will be killed in front of my kids.” For more than a decade, P has been
caught in the Catch-22 labyrinth of the Department of State's special immigrant
visa, or SIV, application process. He has already had two visa interviews — on
March 3, 2020, and April 6 of this year — at the now closed U.S. Embassy in
Kabul. Yet in a Sept. 21 email to Hemp, a foreign service officer wrote
that P still needed another interview. “Obviously,” the officer added, “that
will not be happening in Kabul.” He concluded, “Sorry this is so murky
and chaotic.” Hemp responded bluntly. “In this day and age of online
meetings, Zoom conference calls, FaceTime calls, Messenger video chat, why
can’t they do an online interview?” she wrote. The foreign service
officer checked with a colleague in Washington, who confirmed that, given the
closure of the embassy in Kabul, there was no way for P to get another
interview unless he managed to leave Afghanistan. “Then the SIV case can be
transferred to that country,” the officer wrote. “So, it seems to be a Catch-22
situation.”
Alejandro Mayorkas, the homeland
security secretary, said on Capitol Hill last month that only about 3% of the
Afghans evacuated to the U.S. during the American withdrawal actually have
special immigrant visas. P’s application was first submitted in April 2010,
when Sappenfield’s unit was rotating out of Helmand. Had the process not been
so labyrinthine, P would have gotten out of Afghanistan before it fell to the
Taliban. Now he is trapped. In an email, a Department of State spokesperson
said the effort to help people like P was “of utmost importance” but
acknowledged that “it is currently extremely difficult for Afghans to obtain a
visa to a third country” in order to have a visa interview. P has not given up.
Every day there is a different word on flights. So far, none have had a spot
for him. Hemp, Sappenfield, Britton and Nicholson haven’t given up, either. “Since
the weather is changing, people are asking me to find blankets and warm clothes
for their families in Afghanistan,” Hemp wrote recently. “Of course, they
continue to ask when their loved ones will be evacuated. No clue, probably
never, but I don’t dare tell them that.” Sappenfield, a religious man, also
recently wrote: “Haunted by the promises I made but my government wouldn’t
allow me to keep, I ponder my own Judgment Day. “Irreverently, perhaps, I am
hoping for a front-row seat when that day of reckoning comes for those
responsible for these crimes against humanity.”
^ Biden, his Administration and
most Americans may have forgotten their promises (to save American Citizens and
Afghan Citizens that helped the US) but these brave Veterans continue to serve
their country and save lives. It is because of men and women like them that the
United States can slightly hold our head up high. If Biden and everyone else
did what they promised then we could fully hold our heads up high. It has been
50 days since the US Withdrawal and Biden has already moved onto other issues
he can’t solve or keep his promises with (illegal immigration, unemployment,
Covid, Russia, China, Infrastructure, the Supply Chain Collapse, etc.) ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/u-veterans-wont-rest-until-115853887.html
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