Fault Lines – Left Behind: America’s Afghan Translators

During more than a decade of the US occupation of Afghanistan, tens of thousands of Afghan civilians signed up to work with the American military as translators. They often took these jobs despite fears of Taliban reprisal, including death threats.
In exchange, the US government promised a degree of protection through a visa programme that would provide safe passage to the United States when the tasks were complete.

The visas, however, are never guaranteed. More than 10,000 Afghans who risked their lives to work with the United States over the past 15 years are in limbo, as their applications for Special Immigrant Visas to the US remain in process.

According to US law, the process should not take longer than nine months, but many Afghans end up waiting far longer for their paperwork to go through.

Some 13,000 translators have been given visas and relocated to the US. But building a new life has not been easy and many are confronted with a different sort of struggle to survive.

Government support beyond the visa is often sorely lacking, making access to employment, housing, and medical service in the US difficult or impossible to attain. Often, there is no one to even welcome the translators upon arrival at the airport.

As a result, some translators who made it to the US end up returning to Afghanistan, despite the security concerns they may face.

As US troops have left Afghanistan, Fault Lines investigates why so many translators have been left behind. We follow Afghan translators struggling to survive in the US and those facing death threats from the Taliban at home.

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