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Before the United States made its chaotic exit from Afghanistan in August 2021, Congress had promised special immigrant visas to Afghans who worked with our military or civilian contractors. Once our allies were without the protection of American forces, they would face Taliban revenge.
As U.S. troops left, about 80,000 Afghans did make it out of the country, most with the help of their U.S. military colleagues (although tens of thousands who were qualified were left behind). But there was no time for eligible escapees to complete the complex SIV visa process, so they were granted a two-year, temporary "humanitarian parole" status.
Now, unbelievably, Congress seems ready to kick out those who made it here when their status expires in 2023.
The Afghan Adjustment Act, a bipartisan bill that would give those refugees a path to permanent residency, is almost dead because political leaders from both parties have chosen to ignore it. If it doesn't pass this year, there is virtually zero chance a Republican-led Congress will put it forward next year.
Do congressional leaders, Democrats and Republicans, really plan to stand by while tens of thousands of Afghan allies are loaded onto planes and sent back to the Taliban?
It seems so.