From Military.com:
“White House Will Evacuate
Afghans Who Helped US to Third Country for Visa Processing”
The Biden administration has
finalized a plan to evacuate tens of thousands of Afghan interpreters, drivers
and other allies and their families to a third country while their visas are
processed. An official confirmed that the administration has told lawmakers it
has a plan for helping Afghans who have assisted the United States over the
last two decades. And a senior administration official told Military.com that
the government is planning to relocate Afghans who served as interpreters and
translators and are already in the Special Immigrant Visa process out of
Afghanistan before the military's drawdown is complete in September. "We've
long said we are committed to supporting those who have helped U.S. military
and other government personnel perform their duties, often at great personal
risk to themselves and their families," the senior administration official
said. "We are actively working on every possible contingency to make sure
that we can help those who have helped us."
These Afghan allies and their
families now may be at risk of death or other reprisal from the Taliban once
the U.S. finishes its withdrawal, and advocates are concerned that time may be
running out. Further information on how the evacuation might work is scarce. The
New York Times, which first reported the news, said that the Afghans would be
evacuated, but it was not immediately clear what their third-country
destination will be.
Advocates have grown increasingly
vocal in recent weeks about the danger faced by Afghan allies and ratcheted up
pressure on the administration as the military's withdrawal gathered steam. The
White House set a Sept. 11 deadline by which the military must be out of
Afghanistan, but it is likely to be finished much earlier. In a conference call
with reporters last week, Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, pitched the idea of
temporarily housing Afghans and their families in a territory held by a NATO
nation. This, he said, would give them a safe place to stay while their visa
applications are worked through. King and other supporters of Afghan allies
argue that allowing them to be killed by the Taliban would be a historic
national shame -- one that would haunt the United States for generations. The
senator said that if the U.S. does not support those who put themselves at risk
to help Americans, no one will be willing to help the nation in future
conflicts. "I want the White House's hair on fire" over the need to
safeguard Afghans, King told reporters June 15. "The time is short and getting
shorter all the time." Other
advocates have called for temporarily housing Afghans on Guam, a U.S. territory
that is also the home of Andersen Air Force Base.
There is a backlog of roughly
18,000 Afghan allies still waiting for Special Immigrant Visas, which would
allow them to come to the United States. The visa process is notoriously slow,
bureaucratic and short-staffed, with applicants often waiting nearly three
years to be cleared. In a budget hearing Wednesday, Defense Secretary Lloyd
Austin told the House Armed Services Committee that the military is ready if
called upon to support an evacuation effort by the State Department. "I am
confident that we'll begin to evacuate some of those people soon," he
said. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Mark Milley said the military has the
capability to assist the Afghans. "I consider it a moral imperative to
assist those who have served along our side," he said. In a briefing with
reporters Thursday afternoon, Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby suggested
that non-military charter aircraft might play a role in the evacuation. "Not
all such evacuation operations require military aircraft to conduct," he
said. "It's not like we haven't done this before using ... commercially
leased aircraft or chartered aircraft. ... There are lots of ways to facilitate
transportation out of Afghanistan." The State Department is in charge of
the interagency planning, Kirby said, and the Defense Department has been
taking part. It remains unclear whether all SIV participants will come to the
U.S., Kirby said, or whether some will end up in other countries. He said those
decisions will be made on a case-by-case basis. But he stressed how important
the Pentagon views the need to save these Afghans' lives. "We know we have
a sacred obligation -- and we don't use those phrases lightly here -- to help
those who have helped us," Kirby said. "We're taking this extremely
seriously."
^ While this sounds good now we
have to wait and see if the United States actually evacuates them outside of
Afghanistan before the Taliban takes control of the country again. ^
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