From AFT:
“Afghan evacuation flights to
resume with streamlined process”
After a nearly two-month pause,
evacuation flights from Afghanistan to Qatar are set to resume, Shawn Van
Driver, founder of #AfghanEvac, told Military Times. Additionally, Van Driver
said that measures to shorten the visa process are being implemented, potentially
trimming a years-long process down to months. “We are glad that it looks like
we might be able to be restarting that,” Van Driver said in a phone interview.
“And hopefully, we can have a reliable, repeatable process that continues to
evacuate folks.”
According to Phil Caruso,
Chairman of No One Left Behind, official evacuation flights carrying Afghans
who worked with the U.S. to Qatar stopped in early December. Caruso and other
members of the organization told Military Times that the cessation was caused
by a rift between the Qatari and the new rulers of Afghanistan over Taliban
migrant workers seeking entry to Qatar. The Taliban sought space for these
workers on flights carrying evacuees to Qatar, a concession the Qatari
government resisted.
During the pause in U.S.
government-sponsored evacuations, Project DYNAMO, a non-profit dedicated to
bringing Americans and Afghan allies stranded in Afghanistan to safety, ferried
70 people to safety via two flights out of Kabul. According to a press release,
Project DYNAMO executed its most recent evacuation on Jan. 24 without
assistance from the Department of State, instead relying on its network of
contacts and donors to accomplish its mission. While the State Department has
yet to respond to a request for comment about the resumption of evacuation
flights and visa processing, Van Driver said that reducing the processing time
for applicants to months is a significant step. “[That process] is down from
one to three years,” Van Driver said about the reduction from years to months.
“That’s a really big deal. It represents something that is really, really
meaningful.”
No One Left Behind is one of more
than 150 “self-activated” working under the #AfghanEvac coalition umbrella.
Many groups formed organically and worked independently during the Afghan
withdrawal but have joined together to continue to evacuate U.S. citizens,
allies, and Afghans who worked with the U.S. during its 20 years of war in
Afghanistan. These organizations helped facilitate the evacuation of some
130,000 Afghans during the final weeks of U.S. involvement in the country. While
a significant accomplishment, Van Driver, said there’s more work to be done. “It’s
not nothing that the U.S. government got out of 130,000 people 18 days,” Van
Driver said. But the work is super ongoing.”
According to the Department of
Homeland Security, more than 75,000 Afghans have arrived in the U.S. through
“Operation Allies Welcome.” More than 52,000 of these Afghans have been
resettled in communities throughout the U.S. The remaining 22,500 are still at
military bases throughout the U.S. According to Axios, an additional 2,500
await admission into the U.S. at facilities overseas.
However, No One Left Behind is
tracking as many as 200,000 Afghans who still need a flight out of Afghanistan.
According to No One Left Behind, this number includes members of the former
Afghan National Army, Afghan Special Operations Forces, and members of the
Afghan intelligence services who did not initially qualify for the Special
Immigrant Visa program. “You got 76,000 SIV numbers alone. You know, you’ve
probably got two or 3 times that of all those other buckets of people and their
family members,” Caruso said. “I mean, it’s hundreds of thousands of people.” Those
Afghans still looking for a ticket out of Afghanistan, says Van Driver, face
numerous challenges in addition to their security. Winter in Afghanistan is in
full swing while the “new” Taliban struggles to govern. Aside from any
association with the former Afghan government and the U.S., food, and fuel
shortages make daily life exceedingly difficult for those in Afghanistan.
Farhad, a translator who worked
alongside U.S. forces for years, is one such Afghan facing difficulty finding a
way out of the country. In an interview from Afghanisan, he told Military Times
that he applied for a visa in July, 2021, and is still waiting. Complicating
matters, according to Farhad, is the Taliban’s suspension of passport services
in Kabul. Without a passport or a case number, Farhad’s situation is
increasingly dire. “6 months I am jobless,” Farhad told Military Times. “And my
8 member family needs support now.” However, says Van Driver, the impending
resumption of evacuation flights, combined with a streamlined immigration
process into the U.S., lends hope. “The good news is that SIV processing is
being streamlined and like they’re doing like 500 approvals a week,” Van Driver
said. “And [applicants] are getting through the big barriers.” According to
Axios, the U.S. government ultimately aims to evacuate some 2,000 Afghans a
month once flights fully resume. Van Driver says this will eventually help
those such as former members of the ANA, which he says is a vital bookend on
U.S. commitment to the people of Afghanistan. “We want to focus on making sure
that we’re meeting our commitments to all the Afghans that we served with over
the years,” Van Driver said. “Anybody who worked in the national security space
have a special connection to both Iraqis and Afghans. So, we just want to make
sure we meet that commitment.”
^ We are going into 5 months
since the American Withdrawal and there are still 200,000 (at least) Afghans
who helped us over the past 20 years stuck inside Afghanistan hoping the
Taliban don’t kill them. Biden has all, but moved on to other things he can’t accomplish
like Covid, his Build Back Better, uniting Americans, showing Russia and China we
mean what we say, etc. I am glad that there are these other groups working
tirelessly accomplishing what the President and his minions cannot. ^
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