From the Stars and Stripes:
“American rescue clinic
founder stays in Afghanistan to pursue evacuation for staff and animals left
behind”
(Charlotte Maxwell-Jones poses
with a rescue dog at Kabul’s airport on Aug. 29, 2021.)
An American who founded an animal
rescue clinic in Kabul is still in Afghanistan, trying to persuade the Taliban
to let her retrieve animals released by the U.S. military and airlift them out
of the country with the clinic's employees. Charlotte Maxwell-Jones was unable
to board a military evacuation flight with the animals or charter a private
aircraft before international troops left earlier this week. The U.S. military
released the clinic's animals from their cages in an enclosed area at the Kabul
airport that had previously been used by the former Afghan army, Maxwell-Jones
and a Pentagon statement said.
Maxwell-Jones founded Kabul Small
Animal Rescue in 2018 to rescue strays, provide veterinary services and help
ship animals abroad for adoption. American service members who befriended
animals during their deployments and wanted to bring them home have been among
her most steady clientele. The Tennessee native has vowed to stay until she
secures the evacuation of her staff, their family members and up to 250 cats
and dogs. Maxwell-Jones said she has had eight charter planes canceled in
recent days, costing her a substantial amount of money in nonrefundable
deposits.
The entire group arrived at the
airport together last week, but Taliban guards initially allowed only
Maxwell-Jones and the dogs to enter. The employees were told to wait with the
cats, she said. In the end, only nine of the over 125 people associated with
the clinic made it through the gates and left Afghanistan, she said. The cats
returned to the clinic with staff members. “Despite an ongoing complicated and
retrograde mission, U.S. forces went to great lengths to assist the Kabul Small
Animal Rescue as much as possible,” Army Lt. Col. Karen Roxberry, a spokeswoman
for U.S. Central Command said in a statement Tuesday.
(Cages holding dogs belonging to
Kabul Small Animal Rescue sit at Kabul’s airport last week. The dogs were
unable to travel outside of Afghanistan and were instead released at the
airport by the U.S. military.)
But Maxwell-Jones said the
military provided a lot of “unnecessary pushback” once she was inside the
airport. “All the service members on the ground were very nice,” she said.
“They helped take care of the animals; they took them out; they cuddled them.
They were really, really great. “But some of the higher-ups were like: ‘You’re
using our resources. We need to get people out. Do you care about animals more
than people?’ I didn’t ask to move animals instead of people. I said let’s move
them in addition.” The animals likely would have ridden in cargo spaces, she
said.
Photos of some 125 dogs in
carrier cages that Maxwell-Jones has been trying to ship out of Afghanistan
have been circulating on social media along with accusations that American
forces left their working dogs behind when they completed their withdrawal this
week. Pentagon spokesman John Kirby denied the accusations Tuesday, tweeting
that the military left none of its dogs and that those photographed belonged to
Kabul Small Animal Rescue. The fate of the animals, about 50 of which
Maxwell-Jones described as working dogs abandoned by contractors who supported
the U.S. mission, remains unknown.
“There’s a decent chance that
most of them are alive,” she said Tuesday in a phone interview, adding that she
intends to work with the Taliban, who now control the airport, to retrieve the
animals. She remains hopeful of getting
both animals and staffers out of Afghanistan in the coming weeks. And while the employees wait to depart, they
will continue to work, with an extra emphasis on rescuing more contractor
working dogs that are believed to have been left behind, Maxwell-Jones said.
^ The Kabul Small Animal Rescue
should have (and needs to be) evacuated from Afghanistan. Biden created the
chaos and death there by not seeing the reality of the situation and that led
to disorganization and many many mistakes. People (Politicians, Soldiers,
Ordinary, etc.) that keep say people are more important than animals and that
evacuating the animals takes away from evacuating the people is just now true.
Animals and People are BOTH important and when you can fit the animals in the
cargo hold – where people don’t go – it means you can save everyone. Right now
we need to focus on the American Citizens, our Afghan Allies, Western Citizens and
these animals that we abandoned when we fled in shame and get them ALL out of
Afghanistan. ^
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