They are waiting for flights. Trump then closed the door to the Afghan ally.

During the war, Nasir served as a legal adviser to Afghanistan Air Force and assisted in approved an air strike on Taliban militants. He is still in Afghanistan. Since the Taliban has taken over in 2021, he has been hiding there and waited for the United States to approve the re -settlement.
He said that he had passed the background survey and only needed a physical examination to complete the process. But last week, he and tens of thousands of other Afghan people found that their road to the United States was blocked by a administrative action signed by President Trump.
The order suspended the re -resettlement plan to bring thousands of legal refugees to the country each year. Among many people who are now in trouble, some Afghanians have assisted the United States for war and are seeking a new start and security in the United States.
The request that the former Lieutenant Colonel Naxier, who did not disclose the full name, wrote in the text message that Trump “this decision not only ignores the interests of Afghan people, but also does not consider the interests of the United States.” “”
“How can the allies in the world rely on the US government?” He added.
U.S. refugees have accepted the plan to implement since 1980, allowing legal immigrants who have escaped the motherland due to persecution, war or other threats. Trump said when he suspended the plan that continuing to implement the plan will have a burden on those communities that do not have the ability to deal with refugees.
Trump’s order is called “Re -adjusted U.S. Refugee Population Plan” and will take effect on Monday. It said that the Secretary of State and the Minister of Land and Resources can accept refugees based on specific circumstances, but premise that they determine that this “is in line with national interests and will not pose a threat to the safety or welfare of the people.”
The order does not have a specific explanation when the suspension is over, saying that the suspension will continue to “until the refugees further enter the United States to meet the interests of the United States.”
According to #AFGHANEVAC, which is dedicated to helping Afghanistan immigration organizations that 250 organizations that help Afghanistan immigrants, before issuing orders on Monday, at least 40,000 Afghanists were seeking reorganization in the United States, and the refugee flights were stopped the next day.
According to #AFGHANEVAC, the grounding is particularly devastating for 10,000 to 15,000 Afghaners. They have accepted comprehensive review and are preparing to fly. This is also a heavy blow to about 200 active American soldiers trying to bring their families out of Afghanistan.
A U.S. Army paratrooper in North Carolina Liberty revealed that he had been helping his sister and her husband to apply for refugee identity in the past year to enter the United States in the past year.
Mo Qiao, 26, is a translation of the U.S. military in Afghanistan. He said that he left Afghanistan in 2021 and joined the US Army two years ago to issue visas to Afghan people who directly served the US military or government.
He said that his sister and brother -in -law were both doctors. They were worried that Mo Qiao would be retaliated with Taliban, so they hid. He said that they recently completed the long refugee review procedures and were allowed to re -settle in the United States. The rest is to arrange a flight to leave Afghanistan.
Mo Qiao served at the 82nd Airborne Division of Liberty Castle (formerly known as Pragueburg). He said on the phone: “We almost brought them back to the safe zone, but suddenly everything stopped.”
Mo Qiao said that when his sister heard the news, “she started crying -I also cry with her.”
#AFGHANEVAC Chairman Shawn Vandiver claims that the administrative order is a betrayal of Afghanistan who supports the US government or the army.
“Everyone is froze in place -it is heartbreaking,” he said in a telephone interview.
The uncertainty includes members of the former Afghan army and security forces, as well as judges and lawyers participating in the prosecutor of Taliban. Some judges and lawyers are women, and they have been persecuted by Taliban.
Van Difover said that the suspension of resettlement plans did not solve the problem of illegal entry in the southern border of the United States, and this was the focus of Trump’s campaign. Individuals in the plan cannot apply by themselves, but must be recommended by US government agencies or designated non -governmental partners.
“The Afghan ally who failed to protect our Afghanistan sent a dangerous message to the world: the United States’ commitment is conditional and temporary,” said Mr. Van Difover.
Taliban fled hundreds of thousands of Afghanistan after taking over the regime. A large number of people live in Islamabad, the capital, and they seek resettlement in the United States and other Western countries through the embassies and refugee institutions there.
Many people are worried that they will be expelled back to Afghanistan because they are cut off to the United States. Due to the continuous upgrading of Taliban’s tension, Pakistan has expelled hundreds of thousands of Afghaners.
“In the past three years, we have suffered ruthless harassment by the Pakistani authorities,” said Ihsan Ullah Ahmedzai, a reporter who had worked in the US -funded media institution in the capital of Afghanistan, said that he was in 2021 in 2021. Fight to Islamabad.
This optimism has now disappeared. “Trump’s command feels like a heavy bomb,” said Mr. Ahmed Zayi. “It shattered our hope and let us face danger again.”
Noor Habiba (Noor Habiba) had worked in a US -funded women’s rights organization in Kabul before fled with her husband and two daughters. She said that so far she has always hoped to be in February or three. Arrive in the United States month.
“We can’t go back to Afghanistan,” Ms. Habiba said. “Under the Taliban rule, women have no reason to survive.”
Immigration initiatives are worried that people who are already in the United States may also face risks. According to a internal memorandum obtained by the New York Times, according to Trump’s power awarded the immigration and customs law enforcement bureau, the Bayeng government plans to allow immigrants to enter the United States to be quickly deported.
According to the Institute of Immigration Policy, after the U.S. forces withdrew from Afghanistan in August 2021, the Bayeng government launched a plan that allowed 76,000 to evacuate to enter the United States for humanitarian reasons.
Mustafa Barbucks, a collective researcher and a resettlement expert, said that as of 2023, more than 90,000 Afghan people settled in the United States.
During the administration of the Democratic and Republican government, the number of refugees from Afghanistan and other countries accepted by the US resettlement plan fluctuated significantly.
During President Barack Obama, a total of 85,000 refugees were accepted in 2016. President Joseph R. Biden resumed the plan and accepted 100,000 refugees last year, the most once in 30 years.
The plan requires applicants to accept strict screening process, including background investigation of the Federal Investigation Bureau and other institutions, biometric screening, medical examinations, interviews, and multiple safety reviews.
The US Army Zhhra said that five direct relatives hiding in Afghanistan have completed the procedure when executing the command frozen.
She said she came to the United States from Afghanistan in 2016 from Afghanistan.
“My family is under pressure,” Zahra, 30, said in a text message that she asked not to disclose her full name. “We have been holding a meager hope.”
She added: “The suspension of the evacuation flight made them lose a little hope and make their future full of uncertainty.”
The U.S. Army paratrooper Mocho said he was worried that Sichuan would stop the reorganization of other refugees, but he believed that he would exempt Afghanists because they supported the US mission.
He said, “I still hope for exemption.” “I mean, he is my chief commander.”