In the lead-up to the U.S. exit from Afghanistan in August 2021, the Biden administration tried to convince everyone it wasn't Saigon, that the evacuation would be controlled, methodical and safe. It wasn't. It was chaotic, bungled — and yes, it indeed was Saigon-like.
That was a tragic denouement to 20 years of failed nation-building, and among its biggest casualties were the legions of brave Afghans who worked alongside U.S. troops, diplomats and contractors. Many were interpreters, drivers and human rights activists. They weren't Americans, but they committed themselves to the American project in Afghanistan.
Getting U.S. citizens out safely during America's exit clearly was a top priority. It should have been just as vital to safely evacuate so-called Afghan allies who assisted with the U.S. mission in Afghanistan. For the most part, that didn't happen.
A new State Department report says America failed those Afghans, leaving most of them behind and vulnerable to a Taliban regime bent on hunting down and punishing Afghans who in any way worked for the American side.
Only a month before Kabul fell, President Joe Biden had promised Afghans who had worked with the U.S. that they would not be abandoned. "There is a home for you in the United States if you so choose, and we will stand with you, just as you stood with us," Biden said.
Tens of thousands of Afghan allies chose to leave, and had applied for special visas created specifically for Afghans who had worked for the U.S. along with their families. Only a fraction of those Afghans made it out.
According to a separate report released in April by the U.S. Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, more than 130,000 Afghan applicants for those special visas were still in Afghanistan and waiting for their visas to be processed a year after the evacuation. The inspector general's office estimated that, combined with family members of those applicants, the number of Afghans waiting for special visa processing reached more than 500,000. Even worse, the office reported it could take an astonishing three decades or more to process, relocate and resettle Afghans seeking to leave.
All this serves as a sobering postscript to America's longest and costliest war, one that Washington must learn from if it's going to maintain credibility with willing allies in future conflicts.