From Military.com:
“Calls Grow to Evacuate
Afghans to Guam as US Troops Leave”
(In this Friday, April 30, 2021,
file photo former Afghan interpreters hold banners during a protest against the
U.S. government and NATO in Kabul, Afghanistan.)
In the chaotic, final hours of
the Vietnam War, the U.S. evacuated thousands of South Vietnamese who supported
the American mission and were at risk under the communist government. As U.S.
and NATO forces prepare to depart Afghanistan by Sept. 11, many are recalling
that desperate, hasty exodus as they urge the Biden administration to evacuate
thousands of Afghans who worked as interpreters or otherwise helped U.S.
military operations there in the past two decades.
Despite unusual bipartisan
support in Congress, the administration hasn't agreed to such a move, declining
to publicly support something that could undermine security in the country as
it unwinds a war that started after the 9/11 attacks. “We have a moral
obligation to protect our brave allies who put their lives on the line for us,
and we’ve been working for months to engage the administration and make sure
there’s a plan, with few concrete results,” Republican Rep. Peter Meijer of
Michigan said during a House hearing last week. Lawmakers have urged the
administration to consider temporarily relocating Afghans who worked for
American or NATO forces to a safe overseas location while their U.S. visas are
processed. Some have suggested Guam, a U.S. territory that served a similar
purpose after the Vietnam War. Kurdish refugees also were flown to the Pacific
island in 1996 after the Gulf War.
Guam's governor recently wrote to
President Joe Biden to say the territory was ready to help if needed. The Biden
administration for now is focusing on accelerating a special visa program for
Afghans who helped U.S. operations and pouring resources into relieving the
backlog. “We are processing and getting people out at a record pace,” White
House press secretary Jen Psaki said Wednesday. “We are working with Congress
right now to streamline some of the requirements that slow this process down
and we’re doing the kind of extensive planning for potential evacuation, should
that become necessary.” Zalmay Khalilzad, the State Department’s special
representative for Afghanistan reconstruction, warned lawmakers in May that
“the departure of all educated Afghans" would "signal panic" and
hurt the morale of the country's security forces. “This is a delicate, complicated
balance that we have to keep," Khalilzad said. Democratic Rep. Jason Crow
of Colorado recently introduced legislation that would nearly double the number
of visas available this year, to 8,000, and ease eligibility requirements. But
he said congressional action will not be quick enough or sufficient.
Even if the legislation passed
immediately, the number of visas would fall far short of the estimated 18,000
Afghans waiting to be processed. That figure does not include their spouses and
children, who would bring the total to about 70,000 people. And the average
wait is more than three years. The process has been also hampered by the
coronavirus pandemic, which led the U.S. embassy in Afghanistan to suspend visa
interviews. Crow, a former Army Ranger who served in Afghanistan, said he
prefers the government “evacuate our Afghan partners to a temporary evacuation
site where we can safely conduct robust visa processing without threat to
applicants’ safety by the Taliban.” In a statement this month, the Taliban
vowed not to attack those who worked for Western interests, urging Afghans to
remain at home and warning their ranks against revenge killings. Still, many
Afghans are desperate for a visa, fearing violence not only from the Taliban
but heavily armed warlords allied with the U.S. and seeing now as their last
chance to leave Afghanistan.
The American withdrawal began May
1, when the number of U.S. troops was between 2,500 and 3,500, and could be
completed by July 4. Some 7,000 NATO forces are set to leave by Sept. 11. Independent
Sen. Angus King of Maine said the government needs to find a “creative”
approach to helping Afghans who worked with the U.S. military. That could
include sending more people from the State Department or the military to
process visas in Afghanistan or evacuating people to a safe place to be vetted.
“It’s not only a moral issue, it’s a national security issue,” said King, who
sits on both the Intelligence and Armed Services committees, adding that “we
also have a practical responsibility, in terms of do we want people to help us
in the future?”
More than 300 interpreters have
been killed in Afghanistan since 2016, according to No One Left Behind, an
organization that advocates on their behalf. Former Army Maj. Matt Zeller said
a military evacuation is the only viable option for thousands of Afghans facing
threats who have been protected by the presence of U.S. troops. “I’m only alive
because my Afghan, Muslim translator saved my life by killing two Taliban
fighters who were about to kill me in a battle," said Zeller, whose
interpreter waited three years for a visa.
The U.S. government should have
learned from what happened in Vietnam, said Jim Jones, a Vietnam veteran and
former Idaho Supreme Court chief justice. Initially fearing a mass evacuation
would undermine the South Vietnamese military, the U.S. watched for weeks as
the North Vietnamese Army overtook South Vietnam before starting to fly out
Americans and allies. The effort ended with the largest helicopter evacuation
in history in the final hours of the war. In less than 24 hours, Marine
helicopters airlifted about 7,000 U.S. military personnel, South Vietnamese who
supported the American mission and their dependents. Many South Vietnamese
soldiers and government officials left behind were killed or held in
“reeducation" camps. They included troops who had helped Jones stay alive
as an Army artillery officer. “We had a moral obligation to extract as many as
possible but, instead, we abandoned them to a horrific fate,” Jones wrote in
the Military Times. “We simply cannot allow that kind of tragedy to happen
again with the Afghans. I pray that this great nation does not again turn its
back on beleaguered people who placed their trust in us.”
Pentagon leaders say they are
ready to help in any way they can and downplayed concerns that history will
repeat itself. “I don’t see Saigon 1975 in Afghanistan," Gen. Mark Milley,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, recently told lawmakers.
^ Those who say they don't see
1975 Saigon in 2021 Kabul are right. The last American Combat Troops left South
Vietnam in April 1973 and the North Vietnamese Communists didn't take over
Saigon or the rest of South Vietnam until April 1975. The Taliban already
control most of Afghanistan outside of Kabul (and are constantly murdering
people and bombing places even before the Americans leave) so once the
Americans leave Afghanistan by September 11, 2021 it won't take 2 years for the
Taliban to re-take Kabul or re-take all of Afghanistan and deny Women's and
Minority's Rights there - not to mention murdering anyone who helped the
Americans (the North Vietnamese Communists sent anyone who helped the French or
the Americans to re-education camps well into the 1990s where many died or
simply disappeared.) The US has promised to relocate anyone who helped them,
but they have done very little to do so and there’s only 2 months left. ^
https://www.military.com/daily-news/2021/06/23/calls-grow-evacuate-afghans-guam-us-troops-leave.html
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