From The Daily Beast:
“HBO’s ‘Escape From Kabul’
Goes Inside the Afghanistan Evacuation From Hell”
A year later, the U.S. withdrawal
from Afghanistan is still a blur. For those of us watching from afar, the hasty
airlifts looked more like the climax of a war movie than a coordinated military
operation by the world’s only superpower. The month of August 2021 was filled
with minute-to-minute updates on the chaos: the desperate masses trying to
escape, the rapid advance of the Taliban, the terrorist attack at the Kabul
airport, and the thousands of migrants filing into planes and arriving at
makeshift resettlement centers across the world.
Now, director Jamie Roberts and
the team at Amos Pictures have turned those events into a documentary, Escape
From Kabul, premiering Wednesday on HBO Max. In a tight 77 minutes, Roberts merges
hours of on-the-ground footage with stirring interviews from Afghan evacuees,
American troops, and the Taliban for a compelling look into the human instinct
to survive. We watch, for instance, as people stand in a flooded sewage canal
in unbearable heat, hoping that a U.S. Marine will take pity on them and pick
them out for resettlement. In another disturbing scene, a group of Afghan
citizens, feeling like they have nothing to lose, hop on the wing of a massive
C-17 military plane. The crowds rush toward the aircraft, but the American
troops overseeing the evacuation still don’t know who’s who in the melee. The
plane is ordered to take off, and a single body falls and splatters on the
runway.
Roberts and his team started
plotting the film within days of the U.S.’s withdrawal on Aug. 31, reaching out
to the British and American military and figuring out how to make it over to
Afghanistan. From January to March, they treaded carefully in Kabul, cautious
not to provoke the Taliban’s ire. The Daily Beast spoke with Roberts over Zoom
about the making of the documentary, the Biden administration’s initial
pushback, and the ripple effect of the disastrous evacuation for thousands of
Afghans and their families.
It seems like with your past
couple of documentaries [Escape from Kabul, Four Hours at the Capitol], you’ve
worked pretty quickly. Is that new for you? Do you prefer it? I’ve spent good amounts of time on films
in the past where I’ve embedded for like a year with a group—a jihadi group, a
far-right group—but I guess I like working at pace. Obviously if you’ve got
longer, that’s great, but there’s some stories that feel like they are quite
urgent. With this, HBO wanted something within the year. A deadline focuses the
mind sometimes.
It was fascinating hearing
from some of the evacuees who actually went through that nightmare, and seeing
them side by side with uninterrupted footage of that horrible waiting period
for weeks at the airport. How’d you get in touch with them? Speaking to
charities, speaking to people involved in the evacuation, and going through
networks. We have Afghans working on the film, people I’d met and filmed
with—they’re all on social networks. Everyone is messaging, especially because
they’re spread all over the world, on WhatsApp, on Facebook. We really wanted
people who had been down in the gates where the Marines were and the Talibs
were, people who were in the frontlines in the canal where the bomb went off,
to be able to keep the story very focused.
To me, the most surprising
“get” was the U.S. servicemen and servicewomen—I guess because I thought the
U.S. would want to keep that closer to the vest, since it was, in so many
peoples’ opinions, a bungled evacuation. Did you go through official channels
to get them? With the Marines, on our first approach, we were rebuffed. We
tried different ways and we spoke to Marines who have since left, and then we
started rounds of talks with an intermediary that we met. And I think there was
a groundswell within the Marines. They were frustrated that they hadn’t seen
their story represented, that they hadn’t been heard. So I think the Marines as
an organization decided maybe they would let their people speak on this. Over
time, we managed to open that up, and when we turned up on the base, we were
kind of amazed. Here they were. And the first guy who came in is [Lt. Col.]
Chris Richardella, who is in the film and basically sits down and gives you a
start-to-finish of when they deployed two days before the Taliban arrived, and
then what happened when the Taliban got there, and what happened afterwards.
And it felt like, OK, all of a sudden we’re right in the inside of the story.
Some of their stories seem
like an indictment on the Biden administration’s handling of the evacuation.
[The Marines] talked about the lack of focus or clear directions and everything
they had to witness because of it, but of course, the administration has
control over the Department of Defense and the military. Did that ever come up?
It came up. That’s why we didn’t get access to start with. We kept trying
to knock on doors and explore why this was happening, and we were told it was
coming from the administration. None of [the Marines] really sat there and gave
it to Biden, but you’re right, there were frustrations about the situation they
were put in. I think some people did link that back to Trump. Especially
Afghans who were saying, “This is the deal Trump signed with the Taliban and
didn’t have the Afghan government at the table,” and obviously Biden took the
bat and continued that. He repealed almost everything else Trump did, but he
continued this policy.
Was there anything you were
surprised to uncover over the course of your reporting? One of the things I
hadn’t heard before—it’s alluded to in the DOD report, but it isn’t made
explicit—is how the Marines actually got control of the airfield. They said,
“Well, this Afghan special forces unit turned up and said, ‘OK, we’re gonna
partner with you.’” They had different rules of engagement, so they started
running people over and shooting them, and it was only then they got control of
the actual airport and could start the evacuation. The first person that told
me that, I didn’t actually believe them. Then another person says it, and another
person says it. Then you start to triangulate it, and you look back at the
paperwork. That was shocking. You also see there’s several really
strong, brilliant characters. There’s Hasina Safi, who was a member of the
Afghan government. She’d been told several times before that the Taliban were
going to kill her, that she was gonna be assassinated. It’s shocking to see a
woman like that who’s so gentle, who doesn’t pose a threat to anybody, who’s
intelligent, to then have to try to round up her family, wade through a canal,
[and] go through this deadly assault course to get out in the way that she did.
I helped report on the
evacuation myself. I was glued to the updates in the form of videos and photos,
but it wasn’t until your film that I saw it all so clearly and uninterrupted.
How did you get so much raw footage? I got some from the Taliban. One guy I
met, we got talking and it turns out he was actually part of the special forces
unit who went into the airport directly after the Americans left and he filmed
his buddies going in. He was like, “This is our moment.” After a few meetings
over coffee—green tea—he ended up giving it to me. I was quite amazed because
it’s a scene. You get taken through their experience. You can see they’re happy
but quite terrified because they think the whole place is rigged with bombs and
they’re gonna go off. There’s one guy, I feel like he was a citizen
journalist, but he filmed the Taliban coming in. I think he just realized it
was such a historic moment. And it was something they hadn’t seen in Kabul
before. There’s the footage there with people who were filming right in the
drainage canal where the suicide bomb went off. So it’s not just pulled from
archives from all the normal broadcasters and from a remove. You’re seeing it
from the experience of the people right at the center of it.
And after all that, Biden
called it an “extraordinary success.” The acting ambassador himself says it
wasn’t a success. I was surprised he even said that, because he was very
diplomatic in his interview. You could see that none of these people thought
that. The servicemen were very respectful of the president and the government.
I’m sure when they went out of the room, they were angry, but they were quite
professional. They all thought it was a complete shitshow. They were lucky to
get out alive, and they saw 13 of their colleagues and hundreds of Afghans die.
A lot of them thought they were gonna go in and fight the Taliban. They got
there and they figured out it was a completely different thing.
Speaking of the Taliban, I
think we’ve seen from news clips and other documentaries that the Taliban are
not press-shy, especially not after they’ve taken control. But how was it for
you to sit in front of them? Were you scared? When we got to the point
where we sat down, we’d kind of gone past the point of threat. I mean, they’re
there with all their machine guns. They’ve turned up with RPGs, but it becomes
quite normal, I suppose. The main feeling of threat was when we were filming
around Kabul at night or going through checkpoints. There were journalists
getting arrested. You go through a checkpoint and they’d stop your car and they
had booze all over the road because they’d been stopping people looking for
alcohol. They were going house to house, kicking in doors, breaking people’s
equipment, looking for spies. It all seemed very reactionary, and you didn’t
really know what, day to day, might happen. Almost every other week there would
be a Western journalist or contractor getting picked up and arrested. There’s no
U.S. or British embassy there, so you’re there kind of on your own. The times I
saw people get in trouble was when they did things that basically pissed off
the Taliban immediately and stepped outside the rules. Like taking a picture of
someone’s face for no real reason, and then you end up in jail and you’re not
gonna get out for God knows how long, because you’ve now become a political
asset.
^ I can’t wait to watch this
Documentary. It has been just over 1 year and there is still so much the American
People haven’t been told (by the American Politicians) and still so much the
American Government needs to do to help those still abandoned. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/hbo-escape-kabul-goes-inside-084441292.html
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