
The US military vets helping Afghans fight deportation
Mr VanDiver, who also founded #AfghanEvac in 2021 to help allies escape the Taliban when the US withdrew, said US military veterans owe it to their wartime allies to try and protect them from being swept up in President Trump's immigration raids."This is wrong."The Battle Buddies say they have a moral and legal obligation to stand and support Afghans. They now have more than 900 veteran volunteers across the country.Many of the federal agents working for ICE and the Department of Homeland Security are veterans themselves, he said, and the Battle Buddies think their presence alone might help deter agents from detaining a wartime ally."Remember, don't fight ICE," Mr VanDiver told his fellow Battle Buddies outside court before Abdul's hearing, referring to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, known as ICE."If somebody does fight ICE, capture it on video. Those are the two rules."As Abdul and his lawyer went into court, the veterans stood in the corridor outside in a quiet and tense faceoff with half a dozen masked federal agents. It was the same hallway where an Afghan man, Sayed Naser, a translator who says he worked for the US military, was detained 12 June. "This individual was an important part of our Company commitment to provide the best possible service for our clients, who were the United States Military in Afghanistan," says one employment document submitted as part of Naser's asylum application and reviewed by the BBC's news partner in the US, CBS News."I have all the documents," Mr Naser told the agents as he was handcuffed and taken away, which a bystander captured on video. "I worked with the US military. Just tell them."Mr Naser has been in detention since that day, fighting for political asylum from behind bars. Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told the BBC that there is nothing in his immigration records "indicating that he assisted the US government in any capacity".Whichever way Mr Naser's case is decided, his detention is what inspired veterans to form the Battle Buddies. They say abandoning their wartime allies will hurt US national security because the US will struggle to recruit allies in the future."It's short sighted to think we can do this and not lose our credibility," said Monique Labarre, a US Army veteran who showed up for Abdul's hearing. "These people are vetted. They put themselves at substantial risk by supporting the US government."
President Trump has repeatedly blamed President Biden for a "disgraceful" and "humiliating" retreat from the country.But the US's withdrawal from Afghanistan was initially brokered by President Trump during his first term. In their wake, American troops left behind a power vacuum that was swiftly and easily filled by the Taliban, who took control of the capital city, Kabul, in August 2021. Afghans, many who worked with the US military and NGOs, frantically swarmed the airport, desperate to get on flights along with thousands of US citizens.Over the ensuing years, almost 200,000 Afghans would relocate to the US - some under special programmes designed for those most at risk of Taliban retribution. The Trump administration has since ended this programme, called Operation Enduring Welcome. It also ended the temporary protections which shielded some Afghans, as well as asylum seekers from several other countries, from deportation because of security concerns back home."Afghanistan has had an improved security situation, and its stabilising economy no longer prevent them from returning to their home country," Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in a statement about terminating Temporary Protected Status for Afghans.She added that some Afghans brought in under these programmes "have been under investigation for fraud and threatening our public safety and national security".Afghans in the United States scoff at the suggestion that they'd be safe going back, saying their lives would be in danger."I couldn't work," said Sofia, an Afghan woman living in Virginia. "My daughters couldn't go to school."With the removal of temporary protected status, the Trump administration could deport people back to Afghanistan. Although that is so far rare, some Afghans have already begun to be deported to third countries, including Panama and Costa Rica.Sofia and other members of her family were among the thousands of Afghans who received emails in April from the Department of Homeland Security saying: "It is time for you to leave the United States." The email, which was sent to people with a variety of different kinds of visas, said their parole would expire in 7 days.Sofia panicked. Where would she go? She did not leave the United States, and her asylum case is still pending. But the letter sent shockwaves of fear throughout the Afghan community.When asked about protecting Afghan wartime allies on 30 July, President Trump said: "We know the good ones and we know the ones that maybe aren't so good, you know some came over that aren't so good. And we're going to take care of those people – the ones that did a job."
Advocates have urged the Trump administration to restore temporary protected status for Afghans, saying women and children could face particular harm under the Taliban-led government.Advocates are hopeful that Naser will soon be released. They say he passed a "credible fear" screening while in detention, which can allow him to pursue political asylum because he fears persecution or torture if returned to Afghanistan.The Battle Buddies say they plan to keep showing up for wartime allies at court. It's not clear if their presence made a difference at Abdul's hearing – but he wasn't detained and is now a step closer to the political asylum he says he was promised."It's a relief," he said outside court while thanking the US veterans for standing with him. But he said he still fears being detained by ICE, and he worries that the US values he believed in, and was tortured for, might be eroded."In Afghanistan, we were scared of the Taliban," he said. "We have the same feeling here from ICE detention."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
22 minutes ago
- The Independent
Trump battles sinking public image over DC takeover while National Guard pose with tourists
resident Donald Trump's D.C. takeover is now well into its second week. Washingtonians are in agreement: they're officially sick of it. Wednesday dawned in the nation's capital with news of more chaos in the District of Columbia, this time indisputably caused by Trump's executive order — which the administration is increasingly finding it hard to prove is not a publicity stunt. More and more National Guard troops pour into the city from around the country, though arrests aren't going up, and most of the troops appear to be standing around snapping photos with tourists. In the early morning hours, an armored, mine-resistant tactical vehicle slammed into the side of a civilian vehicle, sending one person to the hospital. The crash occurred downtown, where federal agents and National Guard troops are increasingly piling up in high-traffic tourist areas. A morning report from Fox 5 quoted residents in the higher-crime area of Anacostia, in the city's southeast, saying that law enforcement resources weren't reaching them. Meanwhile, video after video shows bored federal agents patrolling luxury shopping and dining areas, or tourist destinations like the Washington Monument. As Vice President J.D. Vance and Trump adviser Stephen Miller arrived at a Shake Shack at Union Station — one of those low-crime areas where Guard troops have milled around aimlessly — for a meet-and-greet with a few visiting troops on Wednesday, the pair were loudly heckled by locals. Then they bizarrely accused the hecklers of having come from out of town to mock them. Around the city, graffiti appeared honoring a resident arrested after angrily tossing a Subway sandwich at federal law enforcement agents, a since-fired DOJ employee who has become a folk hero around town. 'I'll tell you, a couple of years ago, when I brought my kids here, they were being screamed at by violent vagrants, and it was scaring the hell out of my kids,' Vance said. He denied the validity of a comment from a reporter referring to the area as low crime, and again cited those 'vagrants' as evidence during his Q&A. Union Station is a major arrival point for many tourists in the capital and for many years has struggled with the attraction that the spacious transit center and shopping mall's public facilities provided for homeless D.C. residents. An encampment once existed a few steps from the station's front doors, and inside the station benches and other public amenities were removed in order to dissuade loitering. The Covid pandemic, which accelerated housing insecurity, also led to closures of Union Station businesses which traded reasons for their misfortune including a rise in homeless activity around the station. But vagrancy by itself is not a crime, and Vance's comments, combined with the increase in encampment sweeps around the city the past few days, suggest that Trump's crime-fighting campaign is actually a beautification campaign meant to push an aesthetic that isn't necessarily felt by D.C. residents with roots in the city. Polling shows that Americans who call the city home agree. A resounding eight in 10 D.C. residents told Washington Post pollsters in a survey released Wednesday that they opposed the federal takeover of the city, which is now being fought in the courts as city leaders try to retain control of the Metropolitan Police Department. A similar share, 78 percent, said that they felt extremely or somewhat safe in their own neighborhoods. While arrests aren't surging and city residents don't say they feel safer, it's very clear which community is being impacted the most. U.S. Park Police officials told the New York Post on Wednesday that the agency has cleared 75 homeless encampments around the city in just the short period since Trump announced his takeover. Washington social media channels remain alight with reports of activity from ICE and other federal agencies. Checkpoints have repeatedly been swarmed by hundreds of residents, shouting angrily, until law enforcement agencies pack up and leave. Week two of the takeover also coincided with DC's annual summer Restaurant Week, though dining spots around the city report that the presence of the Guard and federal agents are hurting business as reservations plunged year-over-year. While city leaders are largely paralyzed as they await decisions in the courts, there are already clear signs that this episode could backfire for the president. News channels and social media platforms continue to spread images and video depicting an occupied American city clearly in conflict with its new guests. The unpopularity of Trump's takeover could quickly become an issue in the Virginia governor's race, where a conservative diehard is running against a centrist Democrat with strong DC ties. It's also energized the progressive left, long dormant in city politics thanks to the populations of federal workers and transplants who have elected center-left leadership for years. On Tuesday evening, several hundred people attended the campaign launch of a democratic socialist candidate running for city council, Aparna Raj. In the end, Donald Trump may accomplish little more than juicing up the American left's will to fight back.


The Independent
22 minutes ago
- The Independent
RFK Jr. says he finds it ‘convenient' to wear jeans to the gym
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. explained on Fox News that he works out in jeans for convenience, as he would go hiking before the gym and found it practical. Kennedy recently participated in the 'Pete and Bobby Challenge' with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, completing 50 pull-ups and 100 push-ups in under six minutes while wearing jeans. The challenge aims to encourage American youth to be fit, aligning with Kennedy's 'Make America Healthy Again' (MAHA) agenda, which promotes public health, reducing artificial food additives, and re-evaluating health choices for children. Kennedy's MAHA movement, which echoes President Donald Trump 's 'Make America Great Again' slogan, focuses on health issues, including a reassessment of childhood vaccines. While experts agree with Kennedy's claim about increasing chronic conditions in American children, critics like John Oliver and health experts have raised concerns about the 'dangerous' nature of some of MAHA's proposed solutions, particularly the defunding of mRNA vaccine research.


Telegraph
23 minutes ago
- Telegraph
The public is sick of the Government's failure to tackle illegal migration
SIR – The Home Office is said to be furious that migrants can no longer be housed at the Bell Hotel in Eppi ng (report, August 20), after the council was granted a temporary injunction by the High Court. This fury is hardly surprising, as it means that the Home Office will have to come up with an idea to stop the boats that actually works. At the very least, it will have to speed up deportation proceedings. This will probably be a complete and utter surprise to the Government, but the British public is heartily sick of its inertia and reluctance to stop illegal immigration. Charles Penfold Ulverston, Cumbria SIR – Local councillors are acting in the interests of the people they represent and in the na tional interest ('Other councils expected to submit their own legal challenges ', report, August 20). Government ministers should try it. Gary F S Knight Colchester, Essex SIR – Not taking effective action, with or without good reason, seems to be the stock in trade of the Home Office. In July, you reported on the progress of a dinghy escorted by the French Navy to the point in mid-Channel where our Border Force 'taxi' was waiting. The French even demanded the return of the life jackets loaned to the illegal migrants, so that they might be reused. If the Home Office has a policy, it is clearly not 'to smash' these gangs. Wilfred Attenborough Lincoln SIR – With 50,000 illegal migrants needing to be accommodated somewhere in the UK, Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, must now be back at square one. She might look at sites like RAF Scampton in Lincolnshire, which was decked out at great expense under the Tories and then closed before housing anyone. Put simply, the 'one in, one out' scheme doesn't reduce the numbers coming to our shores. This Government, already short of ideas, has run out of road. Immediate deportation of illegal migrants back to the country they first arrived at is now the only option. Jonathan Williams Pickworth, Lincolnshire SIR – Last Sunday, hundreds of citizens gathered in Ashington, Northumberland, to protest against housing illegal immigrants in the area. In a statement posted on Facebook, Ian Lavery, the Labour MP for Blyth and Ashington, admitted that public services are crumbling, and ended by saying: 'But let's be clear: the people responsible for this decline are not those fleeing war or persecution. They are not the vulnerable seeking sanctuary.' Would that be sanctuary from war-torn France, perhaps? Ian Burns Storrington, West Sussex