Many arrived on special immigrant visas (SIV), designed to aid locals who aided the U.S. government in Afghanistan and Iraq, often at great personal risk. Natiq worked as a journalist in Afghanistan and then on behalf of the U.S. government, training local bureaucrats in running a criminal justice system, which allowed him to receive an SIV and come to the United States in 2019. Before leaving, he narrowly survived multiple bombing attacks.
That visa program has settled Afghan refugees across the country, many of whom were waiting to sponsor family members for their own visas. Now, cut off from family and friends, they describe feeling helpless.
Said, 36, also lives in Northeast Philadelphia, in the area near Oxford Circle where many Afghans settle. Keystone Crossroads agreed to withhold his last name because he fears his full name could be used to identify and harm his family members still in Afghanistan.
A former employee of the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, Said said he’s been bombarded with pleas. “I received a lot of messages from local employees that they are left behind and nobody cares about them,” he said.
The U.S., Said said, “could have done something” to help these allies.
Natiq agreed, calling the U.S. choice to withdraw when it did “a bad decision” and urging the American government to take responsibility for the fallout.
“I just want the U.S. government to pressure the Taliban not to harm civilians and keep the borders open,” he said, as well as to speed up processing of SIVs and to urge nearby countries to accept refugees trying to leave. If that requires troops staying longer, he said, the U.S. should do it.