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    1. orcofmordor on

      > After halting a U.S. resettlement program for Afghans who helped the American war effort, President Trump is in talks to send as many as 1,100 of them to the Democratic Republic of Congo, an aid worker briefed on the plan said Tuesday.

      > The group includes interpreters for the U.S. military, former members of the Afghan Special Operations forces and family members of American service members. More than 400 children are among them.

      > The Afghans have been living in limbo in Qatar for over a year after being evacuated by the United States for their own safety because they supported American forces during the war against the Taliban that began in 2001.

      > Shawn VanDiver, the president of the aid group AfghanEvac, said he had been briefed on the Congo plan by State Department officials. He said that the Afghans would be given a choice between returning to live under the Taliban or being sent to Congo, which is suffering one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.

      > More than 600,000 refugees, mostly from the Central African Republic and Rwanda, are currently in Congo, according to the United Nations. Human rights activists say that the country is not equipped to take in more in the midst of fighting with neighboring Rwanda that has displaced even more people because of attacks on refugee camps.

      > “We think this is just them wanting to send these people back to Afghanistan, where they know they will face certain death,” said Mr. VanDiver. “They know that Afghans are not going to accept the D.R.C. Why would you go from the world’s No. 1 refugee crisis to the world’s No. 2 refugee crisis?”

      > The discussions highlight the longstanding tension between America’s commitment to Afghans, who face grave danger in retaliation for helping U.S. forces during the war, and the Trump administration’s promise to curtail immigration.

      > Much is unknown about the plans taking shape, including whether all the Afghans would go to Congo or whether deals were coming together in other countries. Negotiations like this have stalled before.

      > A Congolese government spokesman did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment. Tommy Pigott, a State Department spokesman, accused the Biden administration of moving hastily in bringing Afghan allies to the United States. He said the Trump administration was working to find options for the remaining Afghans.

      > “The American people have had to pay the price for the irresponsible way hundreds of thousands of Afghans were brought into the United States,” he said. “Our focus now is on restoring accountability by advancing responsible, voluntary resettlement options.”

      > American diplomats have been asking countries in Africa to take in the Afghans for months. But talks fell apart in many places, according to Mr. VanDiver and diplomats with knowledge of the discussions.

      > More than 190,000 Afghans who aided the U.S. effort resettled in the U.S. between August 2021 and mid-2025, after passing background checks.

      > A group of more than 1,100 Afghans are being housed in a former U.S. military base in Qatar known as Camp As Sayliyah. The American government brought them there in late 2024 and promised them a path to settlement in the United States if they passed further checks.

      > Qatar was intended as a stopover, but many of the Afghans found themselves in limbo after the Trump administration ended policies that would have enabled resettle to in the U.S.

      > Some of the people left at the camp have been fully vetted; others have not. But Mr. Trump’s immigration policies have made it impossible for any of them to come to the United States now. The administration said in January that it would close the transit camp without saying what would happen to the people there.

      > Andrew Sullivan, a military veteran and the executive director of No One Left Behind, a nonprofit group that has been working to resettle Afghans to America, said some had been deemed ineligible for reasons that have nothing to do with national security. For example, one woman turned 21 and is no longer eligible to be included on her father’s visa, he said.

      > But, he said, the administration has other options available to bring them to the United States, including the ability to issue exemptions to the policy.
      “Our belief is that if, if they can pass security vetting, they should be coming to the United States,” Mr. Sullivan said. “If they can’t, and they’re not going to come to the United States, I do believe the U.S. government has an obligation to ensure that they’re going to a third country where they’re going to be secure, they’re going to be supported, and there aren’t ongoing humanitarian rights issues.”

      > American diplomats have been meeting with Democratic Republic of Congo officials for months. Recently, the Trump administration struck an agreement with the country to accept migrants from other countries who face deportation from the United States. Part of that deal included a $50 million grant to the U.N. refugee agency to provide assistance in the country.

      > Discussions over the Afghans are separate from the deportation deal, but both are outcomes of Mr. Trump’s sharp immigration policy changes.

      Pranav Baskaran Zolan Kanno-Youngs contributed reporting.

      Megha Rajagopalan is an international investigative reporter based in London.

      Eileen Sullivan is a Times reporter covering the changes to the federal work force under the Trump administration.

    2. chemtrailsenjoyer on

      Another degenerate act, seems shocking at first, and then the realization of how normal this sickness has become

      The best you can hope for is that some more GWOT veterans stop automatically supporting the GOP

      Speed running the end of global US influence continues

    3. Zombie_Cool on

      We will never have another trustworthy ally again, and we can thank MAGA for it.

    4. TSJormungandr on

      I never understood GWOT standing behind GOP when it’s the GOP that got us into the stupid wars in the first place!

    5. SatanicPanic619 on

      oh well that’s nice

      I’m sure people will be eager to cooperate with us next time we have a need for intelligence

    6. HeatWaveToTheCrowd on

      History will not be kind to anybody in this administration. It’s pure evil, and intentional.

    7. StaticSystemShock on

      That’s a great way no one will ever want to help you when invading other countries coz USA just fucks over those who helped.

    8. RastaImp0sta on

      So there is literally just zero reason at all that any country would believe anything the USA does or says at this point.

    9. DragonFromFurther on

      A millionth Evidence that aiding usa / ‚mericans in any way shape or form is detrimental for someones life

    10. They should be given US citizenship. They risked their lives to help us, they did what US soldiers do for the US.

    11. PolloConTeriyaki on

      I hope they fucking put him through committees and send Stephen Miller to the Congo when the Dems win the midterms.

    12. ScrotumScrapings on

      Let that be a lesson to anyone who thinks it might be a good idea to help the yanks.

    13. Tuesday_Night_Club on

      The damage he is doing to our country is immeasurable. He needs to be tried for Treason.

    14. Diligent-Film6935 on

      I’m just guessing here…. even people in Congo probably don’t want to be in Congo? (but I could be wrong)

    15. smashingcabage on

      I know fantastic families from that region who aided US troops voluntarily in light of the internal threats they faced. Some of the nicest people on the planet and what do we do in return? We should all question who the bad guys are. Vote and create change!

    16. QuirkyBreadfruit on

      These people have done more for the US than this lazy tasteless dementing pedophile could conceive of or even accidentally do.

    17. shooshkebab on

      And then trump and USA wonders why they don’t have friends when they want them…

    18. howlinmoon42 on

      Sure thing Republicans -just go ahead and stand aside again with your nonexistent dicks in your hands-no way this will come back to bite us in the ass-these people hung basically everything out on the line, including the lives of their families to help our troops, and this is how you would seriously choose to repay them

    19. Muddy_Bottoms on

      At a previous job we hired a bunch of the guys who had been translators for our soldiers and earned their visa, they were some of the nicest hardest working people I’ve ever met. 

      Disgusting. 

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