By John McCormack
Friday, August 15, 2025
Four years ago today, as America’s 20-year mission in
Afghanistan neared its end, the city of Kabul fell to the Taliban. The next
day, August 16, 2021, produced the most indelible images of America’s betrayal
of Afghan civilians and allies, as cameras captured footage of desperate
Afghans clinging to the side of American military aircraft taking off, and at
least two Afghans fell
to their deaths.
Over the following two chaotic weeks, tens of thousands
of Afghans were evacuated from Kabul’s main airport, where 13 U.S. service
members and about 170 Afghans were killed by a suicide bombing outside of an
entrance to the facility known as Abbey Gate. But the majority
of America’s Afghan allies, including interpreters and their families, were
left behind.
That initial betrayal carried out under the Biden
administration has endured—and in some respects has been exacerbated—under the
Trump administration. While 195,000 Afghans have been resettled in the United
States since Kabul fell to the Taliban, there are at least 250,000
Afghans abroad who are eligible for resettlement in the United States,
including 167,000
applicants for Special Immigrant Visas (SIV), a program for Afghan allies
and their family members.
The pace of U.S. government admitting vetted SIV applicants and their family
members to the United States has slowed from 3,000 to 4,000 a month at the end
of the Biden administration to 200 per month under the Trump administration,
according to Jessica Bradley Rushing, a former State Department official who
was laid off from her government post in July and now works at AfghanEvac, a
nonprofit that helps Afghan allies and refugees. (Trump administration
officials did not provide statistics in response to questions from The
Dispatch about how many Afghans have been admitted to the country this year
through Special Immigrant Visas.) Under the State Department program Enduring
Welcome, the U.S. government was funding the relocation of Afghans, including
by paying for commercial flights from Afghanistan to countries like Qatar,
Albania, and the Philippines, but President Donald Trump’s executive
order issued on January 20 cutting off foreign aid stopped that relocation
funding. “Now that the U.S. government isn’t doing all the relocations, it’s
dramatically slowed,” said Shawn VanDiver, a Navy veteran and the president of
AfghanEvac. “The vast majority are in Afghanistan, but there are Afghans in 90
countries around the world waiting to come here.”
Even if funding were restored for relocation efforts, it
would take an additional act of Congress for all SIV-eligible applicants to
come to the United States. Congress has authorized only enough visas for
roughly 40,000 of the 167,000 SIV-eligible applicants and their family members,
according to AfghanEvac.
While SIV applicants continue to be processed, the Trump
administration shut
down the U.S. refugee program on January 27. That has affected Afghans who
weren’t directly working for the United States but nevertheless face the threat
of persecution from the Taliban based on things like their careers—working for
Western-allied nonprofits or in academia, for instance—or religious faith. The
situation is particularly dire for Afghans who fled to Pakistan and Iran, whose
governments are actively
deporting tens of thousands of Afghans back into the hands of the Taliban.
Just 76 Afghan refugees have been admitted to the United States since January
20, an official for the Department of Homeland Security told The Dispatch.
Behind every statistic, of course, is a real human story.
Justin Alexander Yousufpoor, who served as an Afghan interpreter for U.S.
forces until his father was brutally murdered by the Taliban for working for
the United States in 2010, told The Dispatch about his efforts to get
his family to the United States.
Yousufpoor himself came to the United States on a Special
Immigrant Visa in 2010 after his father’s murder. In 2012, he joined the U.S.
Army, returned to Afghanistan as an interpreter, and became a U.S. citizen.
Despite his father losing his life because of his work for the United States,
Yousufpoor’s family remained stuck in Afghanistan until 2021. His mother and
her children had a letter of recommendation provided by a brigadier general.
While she and two of Yousufpoor’s siblings were able to evacuate from the Kabul
airport, three of his siblings were unable to get inside the airport after the
suicide bombing at Abbey Gate.
Within months of the fall of Afghanistan, Yousufpoor
helped his sister flee to Pakistan, while his two brothers fled to Turkey. Four
years later, the family has not been reunified—his sister’s application is
still pending while his brothers are languishing in Turkey due to a perceived
discrepancy over their birthdates. If returned to the Taliban, “they’re going
to kill my brothers, or they’re going to recruit them to join the Taliban
fighters,” Yousufpoor said. “If [my sister] is captured by the Taliban morale
police or the intelligence, they’re going to immediately take her to the
Taliban trial, and then she’s going to be prosecuted in public by stoning,” he
added, explaining that before she fled the country his sister had been found
guilty in Afghanistan for not wearing a head covering.
As for Afghans who have already made it to the United
States, the Trump administration has made thousands vulnerable to deportation
by revoking Temporary
Protected Status and humanitarian parole for Afghans who arrived without
legal status. This spring, thousands of Afghans received a letter from the
Department of Homeland Security telling them that they would be “subject to
potential criminal prosecution, civil fines, and penalties, and any other
lawful options available to the federal government” if they did not immediately
self-deport. Afghans who lost their protected status due to Trump
administration policies can still apply for asylum. “We’ve heard there have
been some denials of asylum cases, but in the vast majority, they’re being
approved,” VanDiver told The Dispatch. “There’s no real pattern
[to the denials], but I do think that people who crossed the southern border …
are at a higher danger than those who came through other means.” A Department
of Homeland Security official told The Dispatch that 1,841 Afghan
nationals have been granted asylum since the start of the new Trump
administration, but the official did not provide statistics on the number of
asylum requests that have been denied.
One woman named Ashley, who was born and raised in the
United States, spoke to The Dispatch about the plight of her
brother-in-law—a Christian convert who fled Afghanistan because he feared for
his life. Requesting not to use her last name due to fear of what would happen
to her brother-in-law if he were returned to the Taliban, Ashley told The
Dispatch that her brother-in-law crossed the southern U.S. border on
January 11 of this year and approached border patrol agents requesting asylum.
He has been held in detention since then, and on August 7, his request for
“withholding for removal” was denied by an immigration judge. “There’s clearly
a lack of belief in the severity of what it means to be a Christian in
Afghanistan,” Ashley told The Dispatch.
Earlier this year, The Dispatch highlighted
the case of Afghan Christians threatened with deportation at one church in
Raleigh, North Carolina. Members of the church say the asylum hearings for
those Afghan Christians have been repeatedly postponed.
VanDiver and other advocates say they are unaware of any
Afghans in the United States who have been deported to Afghanistan. Chelsea
Sobolik of World Relief, a Christian charity that operates worldwide, noted
that the U.S. is unlikely to deport Afghans directly to Afghanistan because of
a lack of diplomatic relations with the Taliban. But she warned that deporting
Afghans to other countries would still endanger them. “The reality is, if we
deported Afghans to Qatar or to any one of these third countries, they would
likely deport those individuals back to Afghanistan,” she said. “It is not an
overstatement to say that Afghan Christians, if returned, would certainly face
torture or worse.”
As for the Afghan allies stranded overseas, VanDiver
warned that remains a national security issue as well as a humanitarian issue.
“These are all folks who, for one reason or another, served alongside our
military or diplomats or intelligence services. They all took risks because
they believed that the return on their investment—their risk investment—was
going to be really high,” he said. “They thought they were going to be able to
come and pursue their American dream, and instead, we’ve pulled the rug out
from under them at every turn.”
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