Hey there, welcome. Please consider supporting our work with a paid subscription. It’s just $9.95 a month or even better, $99 a year. PS: Follow us also on Twitter @talk_spy. Appeal for CIA, DoD Clandestine Ops to Rescue Afghan AlliesRetired Green Beret Scott Mann says situation increasingly ‘dire’ for Afghan special ops troops hunted by Taliban hit teams as winter comesRetired Green Beret Lt. Col. Scott Mann says President Biden should authorize the CIA and Pentagon to rescue “tens of thousands” of former Afghan special operation troops who are being hunted down by Taliban hit teams armed with payroll records and biometric data left behind during the chaotic U.S. evacuation last August. Mann, who runs Spirit of America, one of a number of veterans groups trying to help their former allies, also says Congress needs to pass legislation bestowing Special Immigration Visas on the troops and their families, who are moving from house to house to evade the Taliban. With winter closing in, their situation is increasingly “dire,” Mann tells SpyTalk. Contrary to reports, “they fought to the last bullet,” Mann said in an interview. “They gave everything, they've risked probably more than anybody in terms of...commitment to the nation. And they are not even categorically eligible for the SIV. And I think we need Congress to take legislative action to expand that and direct the State Department to adhere to it.” Spokespersons for relevant congressional offices and the White House could not be immediately reached for comment Sunday afternoon. Former CIA officers have told SpyTalk since the collapse of the Kabul regime that the agency has maintained contact as best as possible with their former allies. A number have urged the Biden administraton to support resistance efforts, but there appears to be little effort for that since the last holdouts were routed in September and October. In late August, Mann led a private, clandestine mission, dubbed the Pineapple Express, to shepherd several hundred Afghan “special operators, assets and enablers and their families into the airport in Kabul overnight, handing them each over to the protective custody of the U.S. military, according to the report by ABC News. Rescue and support efforts by Afghanistan war veterans in the U.S. have continued, taking a harsh emotional toll on them, according to a recent report in the Military Times.
Mann said that “most of [the Afghans] have had to take their belongings, leave their homes, and they're on the run, and that's what makes it even tougher as winter approaches.” He called the personal and private rescue efforts “very heartbreaking, and very, very damaging to our veterans.”
The State Department, which is in charge of the overall effort, is focusing on U.S. citizens, Green Card holders and their families stuck in the country. American veterans don’t have the resources to get significant numbers of their former allies out, Mann said, especially if they don’t have SIVs. False papers aren’t likely to fool Taliban checkers at the airports. If they make it overland to, say, Tajikistan, they have find find safe places to hide—not easy in the Russia friendly nation. Pakistan has ling been a Taliban ally.
An Afghan who worked for the U.S. Agency for International Development recently filed suit against the U.S. government for not getting his two sons, all that remains of his family, out of the country, as his contract had promised him. |
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