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Dec. 4, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Rich Schapiro and Dan De LuceIn the days and months after the U.S. military’s chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan, Thomas Kasza and some of his fellow Special Forces members focused their attention on the Afghans who had fought alongside them.These Afghans who risked their lives for the U.S. were prime targets of the Taliban. Remaining in their homeland was akin to a death sentence. “Given how they served exclusively alongside U.S. Green Berets, they were by default among those highest on Taliban target lists,” said Kasza, who was one of many military veterans who assisted their former Afghan counterparts in leaving the country and resettling in the U.S.After the shooting of two National Guard members near the White House last week, Kasza and other U.S. war veterans find themselves having to come to the defense of their former Afghan partners yet again. An Afghan who worked with a CIA-trained military unit has been charged in the attack, which killed Sarah Beckstrom, 20, and critically wounded Andrew Wolfe, 24. The Trump administration immediately moved to crack down on Afghans in the U.S., pausing asylum decisions and halting the issuing of visas. President Donald Trump said last week that many of the Afghans who came to this country “are criminals” who “shouldn’t be here.” CIA Director John Ratcliffe said the suspect “and so many others should have never been allowed to come here.”National Guard shooting suspect pleads not guilty to murder charge02:31Those kinds of sentiments haven’t gone over well with Army Special Forces veterans, known as Green Berets, and others who worked closely with Afghans during the war. “It is definitely not fair to group all Afghans that helped us during our time in Afghanistan in that same basket as this individual,” said Ben Hoffman, a Green Beret with five deployments to Afghanistan.Another Green Beret, Dave Elliott, said many of the Afghans he is in touch with are now “terrified” over their fates in the U.S. “They’re fearful they’re going to be sent back to a country where we have had documented cases of our guys being killed in retribution attacks,” said Elliott, who started a nonprofit organization with Kasza called the 1208 Foundation, which supports Afghans who assisted the U.S. during the war.The Green Berets worked with a specially trained unit of Afghans who would go out in front of the Americans on missions to identify and disable improvised explosive devices, a highly dangerous job that resulted in dozens’ being killed. Other Afghans who came to this country after their government collapsed in 2021 worked with U.S. forces as interpreters and drivers and in other roles.“These guys didn’t want to leave Afghanistan,” Elliott said. “They left Afghanistan because the U.S. broke it and handed it back to the Taliban and they had no other choice.”The Green Berets and other war veterans interviewed by NBC News didn’t work directly with the shooting suspect, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, 29, but wanted to speak out in support of the Afghans who fled to this country after assisting U.S. forces.White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said the Trump administration “has been taking every measure possible — in the face of unrelenting Democrat opposition — to get anyone who poses a threat to the American people out of our country and clean up the mess made by the Biden Administration.” Lakanwal has pleaded not guilty to murder charges and other offenses. Authorities haven’t released information about a potential motive. Lakanwal, who lived in Washington state with his wife and five children, had reportedly been struggling to feed his family and was suffering from mental health issues. Geeta Bakshi, a former CIA officer who served in Afghanistan, said that her former Afghan colleagues are distraught that one of their countrymen is accused of having attacked Americans and that the entire community of Afghan veterans could be tarnished by the shooter’s horrific actions.Bakshi said she and other Americans forged a special bond with their Afghan allies during the war, sharing the same dangers and working in common cause to track down Al Qaeda and other extremists.“They put their necks on the line to support us,” said Bakshi, who runs FAMIL, a nonprofit organization that assists Afghans who worked under CIA command in what were known as Zero Units. “We were going after hard terrorist targets, and these were the guys and gals that made it happen. We could not have achieved our many counterterrorism successes without them. People don’t realize these folks bore a huge risk by doing what they did.”Even before the shooting and the Trump administration actions, many Afghans who settled in this country were already struggling to find jobs while trapped in a legal limbo without work permits. Lakanwal and many others who worked directly with the U.S. forces or the government came into the country through a temporary program the Biden administration set up to manage the flow of Afghans fleeing Taliban rule. Many were still waiting for their visa applications to be approved or their asylum requests to be granted, enabling them to work legally. Both of those legal pathways have now been shut off. The moves are likely to increase the strain on the former U.S. military allies, according to Green Berets and other advocates for them. They noted that many of the Afghans experienced several years of war and are now living in an unfamiliar country where they don’t have access to the mental health resources afforded to U.S. military veterans. “A lot of these guys have a lot of the PTSD struggles that we do, and even way worse,” Hoffman said. “And there’s no way for them to get help except out of pocket, which is not easy for them when they’re just working to put food on the table and a roof over their kids’ heads.”The Afghans fighting with U.S. forces lost comrades and family members and suffered grievous wounds, both physical and emotional, according to Bakshi, the former CIA officer.“You have to consider invisible scars from the war and how that can affect people,” she said. “We know that. We’ve seen it. We’ve seen it with veterans. We’ve seen it with veteran suicides.”“Some of these guys were in combat 365 days a year, for five or 10 or 20 years,” she added. “They face many of the same difficulties as veterans do, and they don’t have the resources and the support that veterans do.”Kasza said he worries about how the treatment of Afghans in this country might affect future military operations overseas. “Green Berets are built to operate with and through a host-nation partner,” he said. “If the future partner of a Special Forces detachment sees America so willing to renege on promises made, how likely is it that they will be willing to put their lives on the line to aid in advancing the interest of another nation that will readily ignore their sacrifice?”Rich Schapiro Rich Schapiro is a reporter with the NBC News national security unit.Dan De LuceDan De Luce is a reporter for the NBC News Investigative Unit. 

admin - Latest News - December 4, 2025
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After the shooting of two National Guard members last week, U.S. Green Berets find themselves having to come to the defense of their former Afghan war partners.



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Savewith a NBCUniversal ProfileCreate your free profile or log in to save this articleOct. 9, 2025, 11:35 AM EDTBy Megan LebowitzWASHINGTON — A C-SPAN caller made an emotional plea to House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., on Thursday to end the government shutdown, saying that “my kids could die” if she can’t afford their medication.The woman, identified as Samantha from Fort Belvoir, Virginia, expressed concerns over what would happen to her family if military service members do not get paid next week. The caller, who was also identified as a Republican, said that she has “two medically fragile children” and that her husband “actively serves his country” and had spent two military tours in Afghanistan.She brought up comments Johnson made Wednesday when asked if he would allow a vote on a bill to provide military members with emergency pay if the shutdown continues. Johnson told reporters that Democrats were “clamoring to get back here and have another vote, because some of them want to get on record and say they’re for paying the troops. We already had that vote. It’s called the CR,” referring to the short-term funding bill that the House passed but Democrats do not support.“If we see a lapse in pay come the 15th, my children do not get to get the medication that’s needed for them to live their life, because we live paycheck to paycheck,” Samantha told Johnson.The exchange occurred as Johnson was taking questions live from C-SPAN viewers who called in to the network Thursday morning. According to C-SPAN communications director Howard Mortman, Johnson is the fourth sitting speaker to join the network in studio and take questions from callers, and the first since 2001.Active-duty military members had been scheduled to be paid on Oct. 15, but if the shutdown continues, they will not receive payments for October work.Samantha said that she was “very disappointed in my party, and I’m very disappointed in you.” She pointed out that Johnson had the power to call the House back into session. The House is set to return on Oct. 14.“I am begging you to pass this legislation,” she said. “My kids could die.”NBC News reached out to Johnson’s office for comment.Johnson told Samantha he was “angry because of situations just like yours.” He noted that his congressional district is home to many military families, including families who “have children in health situations like yours.”“This is what keeps me up at night,” he said. “I want you to hear something very clearly: The Republicans are the ones delivering for you.”Johnson continued, casting blame on Democrats for not voting for the GOP-backed continuing resolution, which would reopen the government and provide short-term funding at the same levels as before the shutdown began. Democrats have been pushing Republicans to address health care issues first, noting that Affordable Care Act subsidies are set to expire at the end of the year, which would increase the cost of health care.“The Democrats are the ones that are preventing you from getting a check. If we did another, a vote on the floor, pay troops, it’s not a lawmaking exercise, because [Senate Minority Leader] Chuck Schumer is going to hold that up in the Senate,” Johnson said.The Senate has failed six times, largely on party lines, to pass two funding bills, the House-passed GOP bill and one from Senate Democrats.Reached for comment, Schumer’s office referred NBC News to remarks the New York Democrat made on the Senate floor on Thursday.He said: “Every day that Republicans refuse to negotiate to end this shutdown, the worse it gets for Americans and the clearer it becomes who is fighting for them each day, our case to fix health care and end the shutdown gets better and better, stronger and stronger, because families are opening their letters showing how high their premiums will climb if Republicans get their way, they’re seeing why this fight matters. It’s about protecting their health care, their bank accounts, their futures.”Johnson detailed the C-SPAN conversation later Thursday morning during a press briefing, pointing to the shutdown’s impact on military families.“Many are deployed right now, defending your freedom around the world,” he said. “And they left their young families at home. They live paycheck to paycheck. Many of these, these service members, and this is not a game.”Megan LebowitzMegan Lebowitz is a politics reporter for NBC News.Kyle Stewart and Rebecca Shabad contributed.
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