August 19, 2021
Manchin Leads Bipartisan Effort Urging the Administration on Immediate Evacuation of SIV Applicants & Full Implementation of their SIV Legislation
The
Letter Marks the Latest Congressional Response to the Taliban’s Takeover and
the Danger Posed to Afghan Allies Who Served Alongside the U.S. Mission
Charleston, WV – U.S.
Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV), a
member of the Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees,
today led a bipartisan letter with 55 Senators urging the Biden
administration to address the quickly deteriorating situation in Afghanistan
that threatens the lives of tens of thousands of Afghan partners.
In
the letter, the Senators call for the urgent evacuation of Afghan Special Immigrant
Visa (SIV) applicants and their families, as well as the full
and immediate implementation of legislation
to expand the Afghan SIV program and streamline the application process. They
urge the administration to enforce strategic agency coordination, hold the Hamid Karzai International Airport and take
any additional steps necessary to ensure the safety of Afghan partners and
their families in addition to U.S. citizens. The letter marks the
latest Congressional response to the Taliban’s takeover and the danger posed to
Afghan allies who served alongside the U.S. mission.
“The
Taliban’s rapid ascendancy across Afghanistan and takeover of Kabul should not
cause us to break our promise to the Afghans who helped us operate over the
past twenty years and are counting on us for assistance. American inaction
would ensure they become refugees or prime targets for Taliban
retribution,” the Senators wrote.
“Specifically,
we urge continued coordination between the Departments of State and Defense to
secure and hold Hamid Karzai International Airport, including to allow for the
continuation of military flights and the resumption of commercial and charter
flights. We also urge your Administration to assist with the passage of
individuals to the airport to safety – both those within Kabul and those outside
of the capital – as well as to consider cases where Afghans fleeing quickly may
not have been able to collect or gather appropriate documents,” the
Senators added. “We were pleased that you immediately signed
[our]…legislation to make extensive improvements to the SIV program into law
three weeks ago, and now ask that you move just as quickly to ensure it is
properly and fully implemented ensuring applicants and their families can get
out of harm’s way.”
Joining
Senator Manchin in signing the letter were U.S. Senators Shaheen (D-NH), Ernst
(R-IA) Durbin (D-IL), Hassan (D-NH), Romney (R-UT), Reed (D-RI), Collins
(R-ME), Leahy (D-VT), Graham (R-SC), Peters (D-MI), Rounds (R-SD), Menendez
(D-NJ), Lummis (R-WY), Coons (D-DE), Sasse (R-NE), Warnock (D-GA), Cornyn
(R-TX), Van Hollen (D-MD), Daines (R-MT), Duckworth (D-IL), Moran (R-KS),
Gillibrand (D-NY), Marshall (R-KS), Markey (D-MA), Cardin (D-MD), Murphy
(D-CT), Cortez Masto (D-NV), Stabenow (D-MI), Warren (D-MA), Kaine (D-VA),
Hickenlooper (D-CO), Bennet (D-CO), Rosen (D-NV), Blumenthal (D-CT), Klobuchar
(D-MN), Padilla (D-CA), Murray (D-WA), King (I-ME), Heinrich (D-NM),
Merkley (D-OR), Whitehouse (D-RI), Feinstein (D-CA), Schatz (D-HI), Sanders
(I-VT), Hirono (D-HI), Carper (D-DE), Lujan (D-NM), Smith (D-MN), Ossoff
(D-GA), Tester (D-MT), Brown (D-OH), Kelly (D-AZ), Booker (D-NJ) and Warner
(D-VA).
Find a copy of the
letter here
and below.
Dear Mr. President,
We write to urge the immediate and full
implementation of recently-passed legislation amending the process and
eligibility for the Afghan Special Immigrant Visa (SIV) program and for the
urgent evacuation of SIV applicants whose service to the U.S. mission has put
their lives in jeopardy. As you know, this critical program provides safety for
the brave Afghans who served alongside United States troops in support of the
U.S. missions in Afghanistan. As the situation in Afghanistan deteriorates,
these individuals face increased danger at the hands of the Taliban that has
sworn retribution. For this reason, Congress provided additional authorities to
improve and expedite the application process while maintaining the program’s
security and integrity. We implore your Administration to expeditiously
implement these changes and immediately evacuate our Afghan allies to
safety.
The United States led coalition forces in
Afghanistan for nearly twenty years following the September 11, 2001 attacks on
the United States. Our mission safeguarded the American homeland safe from
terrorist attacks, eliminated Osama bin Laden, and delivered freedom and
education to a generation of Afghan women and children. At every step of the
way, our mission was supported by Afghans who fought alongside us for a better
future for their country. They risked their safety and the well-being of their
families to work with the United States. With the departure of U.S. forces and
Taliban rule in place, the safety and security of our Afghan allies who put
their lives on the line to help our service members and diplomats must be a top
priority.
For this reason, we urge you to continue the
expeditious evacuation of SIV applicants and their families. At your direction,
on July 17 the United States launched Operation Allies Refuge in order to
evacuate SIV applicants in danger from the Taliban’s advances. We appreciate
that this effort has already brought 2,000 Afghans, including primary SIV
applicants and their families, to the United States. However many more remain.
The Taliban’s rapid ascendancy across Afghanistan and takeover of Kabul should
not cause us to break our promise to the Afghans who helped us operate over the
past twenty years and are counting on us for assistance. American inaction
would ensure they become refugees or prime targets for Taliban
retribution.
Specifically, we urge continued coordination
between the Departments of State and Defense to secure and hold Hamid Karzai
International Airport, including to allow for the continuation of military
flights and the resumption of commercial and charter flights. We also urge your
Administration to assist with the passage of individuals to the airport to
safety – both those within Kabul and those outside of the capital – as
well as to consider cases where Afghans fleeing quickly may not have been able
to collect or gather appropriate documents.?
Additionally, the support and protection of our
Afghan allies is why Congress recently passed, with broad bipartisan support,
legislation to make extensive changes to the SIV program. We did so with the
goal of improving the process for applicants while maintaining our national
security. We were pleased that you immediately signed this legislation to make
extensive improvements to the SIV program into law three weeks ago, and now ask
that you move just as quickly to ensure it is properly and fully implemented
ensuring applicants and their families can get out of harm’s way.
To this end, we respectfully request that your
Administration immediately implement all aspects of the statute as Congress
intended, including:
1.
Updating internal and external guidance to reflect the change in the
employment requirement for eligibility from two years of service to one. This adjustment of eligibility must be
applied to all pending applications, including those on appeal which have been
denied on the basis of insufficient duration of service but whose appeal is
still eligible to be re-adjudicated. To ensure that this change is fully
implemented, we ask that all staff who are charged with processing applications
receive training to apply the 12 month standard to all pending applications and
appeals.
2.
The issuance of special immigrant visas to all applicants and their
qualified family members that have passed all steps of the visa process and
only await a medical exam. The adjustment of status conferred by a SIV is preferable both to the
processing of visas and to the applicants than paroling evacuated individuals
into the country, thus requiring additional filings to confer the statuses
included in a SIV.
3.
Full and immediate repeal of the “sensitive and trusted” requirement
for individuals employed by or on behalf of the NATO-led military mission in
Afghanistan, as
required by the Emergency Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2021, as
well as those employed by or on behalf of the United States government.
Congress repealed the “sensitive and trusted” requirement from U.S. government
employment in December 2019, but as of this date we are not satisfied that it
has been fully implemented. We expect the Department of State to implement the
removal of “sensitive and trusted” activities from NATO-led forces support
immediately, re-open the cases of any U.S. government employees who have been
denied Chief of Mission approval for lack of “sensitive and trusted employment”
since December 2019, and expeditiously update internal and external guidance to
reflect this change.
4.
The process for appeals of denials. As newly amended, the law now allows that, if an
appeal is denied for a reason not listed in the initial denial, the applicant
must be allowed an opportunity to address the new denial ground. This allowance
is due to the high success rate for appeals when the cause of denial is known
to the applicant. As with other changes to the law, we request that your
Administration ensure that this change applies to all applications within the
appeal period. This spares applicants the time and effort of re-applying and
conserves the precious processing resources of the U.S. government.
5.
Prioritization of applications based on date of the initial
application. We once again clarify that the “prioritization” scheme
that was introduced in the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2019 is no
longer law. In addition, all application processing must comply with the
Congressionally-mandated nine month processing requirement.
6.
Full transparency and adequate guidance for applicants. This includes, but is not limited to, updating
all public websites maintained by the relevant U.S. government authorities to
provide applicants with complete information about eligibility and process for
applying. Most applicants do not have access to legal counsel for the sake of
understanding the current process. All changes in program eligibility must be
readily accessible and all changes that impact current applicants must be
communicated directly to applicants.
We appreciate the efforts that you and your
Administration have made on behalf of Afghans who worked in support of the U.S.
in Afghanistan. We must now concentrate all U.S. efforts on supporting and
protecting our Afghan allies. Anything short of full implementation results in
grave security implications. You have the strong support of both chambers of
Congress to ensure that no additional Afghan lives are needlessly
lost.
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