Nashir, a law adviser in the Afghan Air Force during the war, supported the approval of airstrikes on Taliban fighters. He is still in Afghanistan. Since the acquisition of Taliban in 2021, he has been hiding while waiting for approval in the United States.
He said that he had passed the background check and needed only a medical examination to complete the process. But in the past week, he and tens of thousands of Afghanistan have found a way to the United States blocked by President Trump's enforcement action.
The order has stopped a reconfigurated program to bring thousands of legal refugees to the country each year. Many of the people today are Afghanistan who supports the efforts of the United States and seek new starts and security in the United States.
Former Colonel Nashir, who asked him to use his full name, in a text message that Mr. Trump wrote, “I not only ignored the interests of Afghanistan in this decision, but did not consider US interests.” I wrote it. “
“How can the world and American allies rely on the US government?” He added.
Since 1980, the U.S. refugee enrollment program has permitted legal immigrants for those who have fled from their home countries for persecution, war, or other threats. When the program stops, Trump said that it would continue to a community that was not equipped to process refugees.
Mr. Trump's order, “Reorganization of the U.S. refugee enrollment program,” will be enforced on Monday. The Secretary of State and the Secretary of Land Security stated that it could be recognized on a case -by -case basis, but only when it was “national interest and does not have a threat to security or welfare.” US. “
The order does not specify when the stop will end. “Until the further entry of refugees is consistent with US interests.”
According to #Afghanevac, a coalition of 250 groups working to help the Afghans move, at least 40,000 Afghanistan people pursue the third country in the United States before the order was issued on Monday. The refugee flight stopped the next day.
According to #Afghanevac, this stop is particularly devastating for 10 to 15,000 Afghanistanans. It is also a serious blow to 200 estimated US service members who are trying to take their families away from Afghanistan.
The U.S. Army TRO troops in Fortrivati, North Carolina, have been asked to be identified in his code name, Mojo, and helps his sister and husband apply for a refugee status to enter the United States from Afghanistan. I said.
The 26 -year -old Mojo was an Afghan's US military interpreter. He said that after leaving Afghanistan in 2021, he joined the U.S. military two years ago under a program that gave a visa to the Afghanistan who served the U.S. Army or the government directly.
He said that his sister and his brother -in -law, both siblings, were hiding in retaliation from Taliban for Mojo's military service. They recently said that they had completed a long refugee examination process and have approved to reconnect in the United States. What remained was to arrange a flight from Afghanistan.
“We were very close to taking them safely -it was suddenly closed,” Mojo said by Fort Rivati, previously known as Fort.
When his sister heard the news, Mojo said, “She started crying -I started crying with her.”
Sean Van Diver, President of #Afghanevac, called the Presidential Order as a betrayal of Afghanistan who supported the US government or the army.
“Everyone is frozen at a predetermined position. It's painful,” he said in an interview.
There are judges and lawyers who are involved in the prosecution of Afghanistan, former members of the Afghanistan, and Taliban members to pierce their uncertainty. The judge and some lawyers are women and are persecuted by Taliban.
VANDIVER said that the suspension of the third -country settlement program has not dealt with illegal entry due to immigrants on the southern US border. Programs cannot be applied alone, but must be introduced by US government agencies or non -governmental partners.
“If you can't protect Afghanistan's ally, a dangerous message will be sent to the world. US commitments are conditional,” said Vandibur.
Hundreds of thousands of Afghanistan who escaped after the acquisition of Taliban landed in a nearby Pakistan. Many live in the capital, Islamabad, pursuing the third country of the United States and other western countries through embassy and refugee agencies.
Their path to the United States has been cut off, and I'm afraid they will be expelled by Afghanistan. Pakistan has already expelled hundreds of thousands of Afghanistan people because of the growing tension with the Taliban.
“For three years, we have endured the merciless harassment from Pakistani authorities,” said Irai, a journalist in cooperation with the media outlet provided by Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, before escaping to Islamabard in 2021.・ Ura Ahmedzai said. He will soon depart for the United States, “he added.
That optimism is now disappearing. “Trump's order felt like a bomb,” said Amedzai. “It broke our hope and re -vulnerable to danger.”
Neur Habiba, who had been working with her husband and two daughters before escaping to Islamabad after cooperating with the women's rights groups provided by Kabul, has now arrived in the United States in February or March. He said he wanted it.
“We can't return to Afghanistan,” said Habiba. “There is nothing left for women to live under the rule of Taliban.”
Immigration defenders are worried that the Afghanistanes already in the United States could be dangerous. According to the internal memo obtained by the New York Times, immigrants permitted to the country under the Biden administration program may be quickly repatriated by Trump's authority to immigrants and customs execution.
After the U.S. forces withdrew from Afghanistan in August 2021, the Biden administration has launched a program to allow 76,000 evacuated Afghanistan to enter the United States for humanitarian reasons. 。
According to Mustafa Babak, a fellows of the third country, a fellow of the Emerson group, more than 90,000 Afghanistan had settled in the United States as of 2023.
The number of refugees from Afghanistan and other countries, approved based on the US Third State Resident Program, has fluctuated violently under the democratic and Republican government.
Under President Barak Obama, a total of 85,000 refugees were hospitalized in 2016. In 2020, the last year of Trump's first term, the number reached 11,000. President Joseph R. Videen Jr. revived the program and acknowledged 100,000 refugees last 30 years.
The program requires the applicant to take a strict screening process, including FBI and other organizations, background checks, biometric authentication screening, health checkups, interviews, and multiple security reviews.
Sergeant, Sergeant, Zara, stated that five close relatives hidden in Afghanistan had created the process halfway when the presidential ordinance freezed them.
She said she came to the United States from Afghanistan in an academic scholarship in 2016. She said she joined the US military in 2021.
“My family feels very stressed,” said Zara, 30 -year -old, asking her to not make her full name public. “We are hanging on the small hope given.”
She added, “This suspension of evacuation flights has removed its small hope and has an uncertainty future.”
Mojo, a U.S. Army of the U.S. Army PAR, said that Trump was afraid to prevent other refugees, but believed that it would exempt the Afghanistan allies to support the US mission.
He said, “I still have hope,” for exemption. “In other words, he is my commander.”