U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
  • LANGUAGE OPTIONS


Op-ed: The U.S. Must Do Right By Its Afghan Allies

August 16, 2024

By Eskinder Negash

 

Nearly three years ago, Americans watched in horror as the Taliban took over Afghanistan.

Tens of thousands of Afghans who had served alongside the United States during the war were evacuated to safety. Thousands more were left behind in Afghanistan under the Taliban’s repressive return to power.

The news cycle in the United States moved on. The fall of Kabul became a moment in U.S. foreign policy history, one that bubbles to the surface during the occasional Congressional hearing.

But, for many, the trauma of August 2021 is an ever-present, ongoing reality—one that hardens with another passing anniversary. Afghans saw their homeland enveloped once more by the Taliban’s brutal rule. Americans worked around the clock to get loved ones and former colleagues out before the evacuation ended. In many cases, these stressful and traumatic efforts did not succeed.

The United States’ mission to aid our Afghan allies is just as noble and pressing as it was during the historic airlift in August 2021. At this divided moment in our domestic and foreign policy, this is a just cause that deserves swift, bipartisan action.

Afghans who were evacuated in August 2021 were not admitted to the United States as refugees under U.S. law. Instead, arriving Afghans were granted parole, a temporary status to enter and stay in the United States.

In September 2021, Congress authorized Afghans arriving through parole to receive the same benefits as refugees, such as federal aid like food stamps or resettlement services that local agencies and nonprofits offer.

Afghans’ parole status came with support, but not with a path to a permanent status in the United States—despite the fact those who worked alongside U.S. troops and were evacuated clearly cannot return to Afghanistan.

Members of Congress proposed a bill called the Afghan Adjustment Act, which would offer a streamlined path to a Green Card for Afghan parolees after additional vetting of their cases. It would also work to improve consular processing for those Afghans who were left behind in the evacuation.

The Afghan Adjustment Act has been introduced in Congress two summers in a row—in August 2022 and July 2023. Despite ever-growing support, lawmakers have been unable to pass it into law.

In the vacuum of a lasting solution, Afghans have sought grants of asylum, a time-intensive, costly, and traumatizing process. They’ve had to pursue temporary statuses like another term of parole or Temporary Protected Status, which adds to the government’s case load of short-term requests for immigration relief.

Once again, the Afghan Adjustment Act has a chance to pass into law this year, as a version of the AAA could be attached to the annual defense bill. But this issue can only be addressed if lawmakers finally prioritize it and treat it as a must-pass item.

Afghans here in the United States after three years in limbo can no longer wait.

Congress and the administration can take other steps to support Afghans, both in the United States and abroad.

This fall, Congress can authorize additional visas in the Afghan Special Immigrant Visa program, which offers a path to Green Card status for those who worked directly for the U.S. military or government for at least a year during the war in Afghanistan.

Both branches of government can work to ensure that Afghan refugee and Special Immigrant Visa cases are efficiently processed—partnering with civil society organizations on identifying roadblocks and bureaucratic hurdles that hinder relocation efforts.

Congress can ensure that Afghans still arriving through humanitarian parole are connected to services, as this support for new arrivals lapsed last fall and has not been renewed.

U.S. support for its Afghan allies would make their integration into the United States smoother, which pays dividends down the road for communities welcoming them.

It would also signal to others around the world that the United States stands by its allies for their sacrifices for U.S. values and interests.

At this divided point in our history, support for an immigrant community does not need to be another source of partisan divide and paralysis.

It is past time to rally behind our Afghan allies while such support can still make a difference.

 

 

Click here to see the original post at the Richmond Times-Dispatch


Related Posts

Op-Ed – Eskinder Negash: It...

By Eskinder Negash   Three U.S. planes landing in Port-au-Prince came under gunfire by local gangs last month. In response...

READ FULL STORY

USCRI Cleveland: Reprise 2024

In October, USCRI Cleveland held its annual benefit concert, reprise, featuring international musical acts and food from Northeast Ohio's refugee...

READ FULL STORY

International Day of Tolerance

Difference is of the essence of humanity. Difference is an accident of birth and it should therefore never be the...

READ FULL STORY