The Daily Signal - 'I Was Totally Dying': Afghan Interpreter Recalls Chaotic US Withdrawal
Episode Date: August 17, 2022Monday, Aug. 15, marked one year since the Taliban reclaimed Afghanistan after 20 years of war and bloodshed. The New York Times reported that upward of 300,000 Afghans helped U.S. efforts in Afghan...istan over those years. On this episode of "The Daily Signal Podcast," Aziz, an Afghan interpreter whose full name is being withheld by The Daily Signal, shares his story of escaping the Taliban and the fallout after the botched U.S. withdrawal. "To be honest with you, it was a really dark day and very bad time," Aziz recalls of the days leading up to the fall of the capital city of Kabul. "There was fear. There was disappointments as the provinces were collapsing and the Taliban were reaching to the capital. I was totally dying, like a battery will lose its charge. I was seeing my body from inside; it was dying." Aziz served as interpreter for Chad Robichaux during his eight deployments from 2003 to 2007 as a staff sergeant in the Marines' Force Reconnaissance special operations unit or as a Defense Department contractor. The Aghan fought side-by-side with the Americans. Robichaux, author of the forthcoming book "Saving Aziz: How the Mission to Help One Became a Calling to Rescue Thousands From the Taliban," also joins the podcast to describe helping to evacuate Aziz, his family, and thousands of others as chaos unfolded in Afghanistan. Aziz says that he didn't expect his country to fall so quickly to the Taliban. "We were thinking it will probably at least take them a few years before the regime collapsed," Aziz says. "We were not expecting it, that the regime will collapse all of a sudden within the matters of hours. Like within 24 hours, the whole system collapsed. That was totally unpredictable," Now residents of The Woodlands, Texas, Aziz, 39, and Robichaux, 46, share their journey out of Afghanistan, their message to the Biden administration, and what the future holds for the terrorist-run country. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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This is the Daily Signal podcast for Wednesday, August 17th. I'm Samantha Rank. Monday, August 15th, marked one year since the Taliban reclaimed Afghanistan after 20 years of war and bloodshed.
Chad Robesho and his Afghan interpreter Aziz joined the podcast today to detail their escape from the Taliban after the U.S.'s botched withdrawal last August.
But before we get to my conversation with Chad and Aziz, we have an important announcement.
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Joining the show today is former Force Recon Marine Chad Robeshoe and his interpreter Aziz.
Monday marked the one-year anniversary since the Taliban captured Afghanistan's capital of Kabul,
effectively taking over the country.
Chad and Aziz, thank you so much both for joining the show today.
Absolutely, Samantha. Thanks for having us on.
Of course. Now, I want to flash back to August of 2021 when the Taliban was making its way to Kabul.
Aziz, I want to start with you. Can you tell us a little bit about the days leading up to the Taliban takeover and how your family was handling the situation?
Thank you very much for the time. To be honest with you, it was a really dark day and a very bad time.
There was fear, there was disappointments.
As the provinces were collapsing and the Taliban were reaching to the capital,
I was totally dying like a battery will lose its charge.
I was seeing my body from inside, it was dying.
And then on the other hand, I had my brothers, Chad and some other guys.
They were texting me and they were giving me the hope that they are finally coming to save me.
me. I don't have to be worried. They knew it in what situation I was. And especially when I was
watching the news that they were killing all those people, the Afghan National Army, the police,
the India's guys, interpreters, or anybody who was involved either with the ex-government of
Afghanistan or worked under the United States contractors or directly for the military or government.
So we were actually, the family was under fear.
I myself was under fear and my daughters were crying as they were seeing it.
They were coming and finally there was totally disappointments.
Now, did you anticipate that the fall would happen and, you know,
what was mentally going through your minds, your family's minds in the weeks leading up to it?
In the weeks leading up to it, we didn't anticipate that it will happen just as happened.
We were thinking maybe because of that strong army we had over there, the strong zero units that were trained by CIA,
the ammunations and guns that they had.
We were thinking it will probably at least take them a few years before the regime collapsed.
We were not expecting it that the regime will collapse all of a sudden within the matters of hours,
like within 24 hours, the whole system collapsed.
That was totally unpredictable.
But still, there was the fear of, like when the government, the United States government,
turned their back to all the interpreters and all those people that they worked for them either directly or indirect.
there was a totally fear of being killed in front of your family, being tortured,
which was a really a risky situation for me.
Yeah, absolutely.
I have a text message actually pulled up from Chad on my phone right now.
It was dated August 20th of 2021 telling me that he had successfully evacuated you and your family.
Chad, I want to dive a little bit more into the.
evacuation itself in just a moment but Aziz can you tell us what life has been
like for you and your family since leaving Afghanistan last year?
To be honest with you we have been through many changes since last year up to now
we spent like nine months in Limbo in Abu Dhabi because of the State Department
slow processing the immigrants in the humanitarian city in Abu Dhabi and then
finally moving to United States.
There are some goods and bads.
The bad part is like those few days
that we were first trying to leave,
but we couldn't leave.
We were trying to come to the airport
as Chad's friends that they were inside the Kabul airport.
They were sending me GPS locations
that I should come to this gate with my family.
But because of all the big crowd and people,
we could not make it.
Plus, there were different,
security lines like the Taliban security line was in the outer circle, in the middle circle.
There was the zero unit guys, the Afghan military, and then the internal circle was controlled
by the US Marines. I got the, they shot at me and my family several times. Every day when I received
the new direction to reach with my family to that direction for the purpose of getting inside
the airport, we couldn't make it. We were getting disappointed. We were getting disappointed. We were
getting hopeless every day and every day.
But finally, after a few days when the guys physically had to come outside and find us in the
crowd, then we were able to make it inside.
We saw people that they got shot at, that we saw children, that people stepped on it.
And families were lost from each other, like daughter, lost mom and dad, like son lost,
their brothers.
There was all kinds of bad and heartbreaking situations that we've been through.
On the other hand, we were seeing dead in front of us.
I was looking at my children's faces, at my wife's face,
that they were so scared and so, I mean, crying inside.
But then once we ended up into Abu Dhabi, on the other hand,
since we were not vaccinated, we spent a lot of time inside the back.
building. We were not allowed to move from one building to another building because, first of all,
all the immigrants were not vaccinated. Secondly, they didn't have visas. There was a fear of
that they might jump over the wall and run away into the city. I mean, there was all kinds of
perceptions that they kept us inside the buildings as prisoners. We ate the same thing.
We slept all day and night inside the same room.
We didn't have the freedom to walk from one building to another building
because they were just trying to control the crowds and the people
because everybody was pushing themselves to either reach to the building
where the American NGOs were or the United States consulate
or the CBP building or the Afghan embassy.
They were just trying the same thing as they were doing in Afghan airport because there were all kinds of rumors
that the United States will only take such and such and such and people, but not such and such and people.
Then they will send some of the people to Brazil or to Uganda or some other countries.
So everybody was still kind of in the mood or in the action of pushing each other, elbowing each other,
try to make it first so they get the chance or the ticket to fly to the United States.
I mean, every rumors or news that was spread out, it was killing us.
The children, every day they were getting disappointed, my wife and myself, as I was the lead
for all the Afghan immigrants inside the humanitarian city, I was the main contact between
the U.S. Embassy, the NGOs, the U.E.S.
the Red Cross, all the UEECIDs trying to create communications.
I worked really hard between all those buildings
and the 17,000 Afghan immigrants on each floor,
each building, each actually cluster.
I created communication channels through WhatsApp groups.
So when all these people come, like the vaccine team,
when they came in the middle of the night,
They whip me up there like Mr. Aziz, we don't know where to start, how to start, because the people are not respecting the line.
They're just pushing each other.
There have to be some type of leadership.
There have to be some type of management from among the immigrants so that we should be able to do our job in a best manner.
But then finally, we made it to United States like after nine months spending.
in a walled compound where there was no trees, no grass, no freedom of walking from one
place to another place. It was just like spend the time in a lockup.
Wow. Wow. That is quite a story and quite a journey that you had to take to get here to the
United States. Do you have family or I know your immediate family got out? Do you have any family
members or friends that are still in Afghanistan? And if so, have you been able to get in contact
with them to, you know, see what's been going on there? Yes, my parents and my siblings are
unfortunately still stack in Afghanistan. They have to, they had to move from the capital
right before the Taliban take over the capital. They had to move to a different province, which I
cannot name here for their security purpose.
And they move to different provinces and they're just still in hiding because a lot of people
at the capital and the provinces that are near the capital, they know them who they are
and whose parents or siblings they are because of what I did for the United States government
and the military in Afghanistan.
that's also either directly or indirectly affecting their lives negatively.
Chad, I want to ask you a little bit about the evacuation efforts that you helped with.
As I mentioned earlier, I remember getting this text message from you telling me that you had successfully evacuated Aziz and his family.
And you also helped more than 17,000 Afghans and allies that were stranded in the country.
walk us through, if you could, the logistics of the evacuations.
Well, I mean, it was obviously very complicated and very fast.
And, you know, Samantha, you know, I'm a person of faith.
And I'll tell you that there's no way to explain actually what happened other than it was divine
because the way things came together were just truly was just miraculous.
I mean, doors are open for us.
People that stepped in to help financially, logistically, the way it happened and the way it happened so quickly was just,
something that's very, you know, very difficult to even explain. But initially we got together,
myself and Sarah Verardo, teamed up from Mighty Oaks Foundation in the Independence Fund,
the Start, Savor Allies. I started contacting former Special Operations veterans that I knew and trusted
very well, who had the experience to pull off initially the rescue of disease and his family.
And as we were putting this together, one of the team members noted that there was a group of
about 3,500 orphans.
And so we kind of paused for a second,
said if there's,
instead of just getting a Ziz and his family needs,
why don't we get other people?
Because we have the skills,
we have the experience,
we have doors are opening.
They give us the ability to do this.
Sarah was able to get us access
to go in the H-Kaya airport
through the Joint Chiefs.
And then,
so we started looking at different ways
to help other people.
And we knew that there would be vulnerable groups
like women and children,
Christians that we persecuted.
Not only that, you know,
interpreters themselves and their families, but Americans. And so we made a decision to help as many
people as we could. And in that effort, we reached out. One of our team members, Joe Roberts, had
a contact with the royal family of the UAE, which is where the Abu Dhabi Humanitarian Center is.
And we asked for assistance, and they agreed. And they gave us access to the Humanitarian Center
to move people to, which is very important because if you're moving people country to country without a visa,
They can't just go into open population.
You have to go into a humanitarian center.
So we had access to that, which is a key element to the evacuations.
And additionally, they gave us access to their C-17 planes with pilots.
Glenn Beck, who's a longtime friend of mine and supporter of Madi Oaks Foundation,
started raising money for flights and to be able to fly people out,
but didn't really have a system to fly people out.
So he contacted me and, you know, again, had another one of these developments.
kind of connections where he's like we have the ability to get people out but we're struggling
to get flights he has flights but don't have the ability to get people out so we merged with
mercury one uh and all these amazing people came together and it just came it just happened so quickly
and i'll tell you that that first 10 days at the hkaja airport as cabul was falling uh the evacuation
of people uh it was all such a blur uh it was very hard to even wrap your head around what was
happening because everyone if you stopped and slept for 10 minutes you were like trade you felt like
you were trading that for someone's life and so no one stopped no one slept everyone just pushed through
for for 10 days straight we didn't know how much time we have it just so happened to end up
being 10 days and when the dust settled that's when we realized we had actually rescued about
12,500 people at that time um but as the u.s military was withdrawing and shutting down the airport
we knew we couldn't leave we knew there was thousands of americans still there
The news was saying there was 100.
The White House was saying there was 100.
We knew that was not true.
And by the way, it didn't matter if it was 1,000 or 100.
We don't leave one American behind.
And our interpreters, we knew there were tens of thousands
of interpreters and their families there.
We just knew too much to leave.
We couldn't leave.
And so we chose to stay.
And through a coordinated effort with other nonprofits,
we kept leading these efforts and got another 5,000 people
out totaling 17,000.
We had also seen as a first,
flights dry up, the effort push to people with fleeing Kabul in a place called the
Pansir Valley where they want people wanted to evacuate and flee the Tajikistan border to
escape, but they didn't know how to escape because you got mountains, treacherous mountains
and Taliban and the Pansier River, which is ice melt, Category 5 Rapids River and guarded
by the Taliban and Chinese military was there, the Russian military was there.
So they didn't have any information how to cross and how to pass.
We made the decision to send a two-man team myself and one other team member named Dennis,
and we went into the Tajikistan and went to the Panjah River,
crossed over in Afghanistan, and built routes to provide that information out
so people could have the information you needed to safely evacuate.
And so, you know, this all happened in a very short period of time.
And so many amazing people are involved.
And, you know, it was just miraculous thing.
And, you know, it's a tragedy.
It's a tragedy where we are today.
What are still have, according to State Department,
and, you know, in July 18th report,
the State Department said that we still have 74,000 of our interpreters still in Afghanistan
and we're the terrorist regime, the Taliban that they were fighting with us against.
Is there?
74,000.
And if you add their family members, which the average 4.5 family members,
we're talking 330,000 families.
of our interpreters that fought alongside of us for 20 years that are in danger left there.
And the State Department's moving out 200, 200 per week. And that, if they stay on that plan,
they'll successfully get all our people out in 140 years. So it's a terrible system. They
had no plan to safely evacuate everyone. There's no telling how many Americans are still there.
We'll never know. And, you know, this anniversary is a happy moment because I'm sitting here next to
my friend, Aziz. So it's a happy moment in that, that he's family safe in America. But it's also a sad
moment to know that this didn't have to happen. Our interpreters didn't have to be left behind.
Our American citizens didn't have to be left behind. And the world is not a safe place today
because of the decision that was made to evacuate Afghanistan. There was absolutely no reason
for us to turn over Afghanistan and Boggamer Air Force Base, the most strategic location in the world
that sits between Iraq, Iran, Russia, and China to turn it over to.
to the Taliban, the world's largest terrorist regime, a most dangerous terrorist regime.
There was no reason to do that.
We had 2,500 troops on the ground there.
At one point, 2,500, at the time we evacuated, at 4,000 troops.
We still have 80,000 in Japan and 40,000 in Germany and 35,000 in South Korea.
You know, of all these years since World War, in the Korean War, we have all these troops
that they've got to leave.
We didn't have to leave.
The president's advisors advised against it.
They decided to do it anyway.
It was a catastrophe.
Many thousands of lives are lost.
Who knows how many people are lives of being lost now?
Women's rights in Afghanistan are gone.
They're living as 20 million women are sex slaves in Afghanistan right now because of it.
And the world is a much, much more dangerous place.
And the tragedy continues as we're not even moving our interpreters that have been evacuated.
We still have thousands in places like Abu Dhabi right now.
The State Department will not move.
And it's just a tragedy, Samantha.
It really is. And I wanted to talk a little bit more about the 74,000 number that you brought up.
What are the consequences for those, for those allies if they were to get caught by the Taliban?
I mean, what consequences are they facing potentially?
Well, you know, I'll get to let Aziz speak more to it.
But to me, these people, this is the enemy of the Taliban.
These are the people that fought alongside of us for 20 years against the Taliban.
This is their enemy.
They're going to, and they have already, they're going to torture them.
they're going to kill them, likely torture them in front of their families, kill their families,
enslaved their women, their wives and daughters. And there's no repercussions to it.
We gave, we, I mean, the United States of America gave Afghanistan to the enemy.
Without consultation, by the way, of the Afghan government, without consultation of the other
international community that was using Bagam Air Force Base as an international hub to defeat
terrorism, we gave that all of that to the Taliban. So they have full authority to
prosecute and persecute their enemies, which is our interpreters, and they're still there.
74,000 of them, over 300,000 would consider their families in Afghanistan vulnerable and being
hunted down, the last we know, being hunted down by the Taliban.
And it just troubles my soul to know what has happened to these people who, like Aziz,
this is an example of someone who fought alongside of us bravely, saved my life, saved U.S.
service members' lives.
these are the people that we hand it over to the enemy.
Aziz, did you have anything that you wanted to add?
Yeah, obviously, as Chad mentioned, the Taliban are a group of people that are ignorant and educated from the childhood.
They are trained in Pakistani madrasas.
In those lockups, they are given an ideology to kill anyone who doesn't have a beard,
who doesn't have a turban or a beard is an infidel for them.
Anyone who worked for the United States government or the ex-Afghan government,
they are infidels.
For them killing of us and the other interpreters or the contractors or the ex-Afghan officers,
soldiers, is like it's giving them the idea of that they will become
to go to the paradise.
They think that by killing of all of us,
they will get the chance to go to paradise.
So what should we expect from such a group,
such a terrorist group,
that all they did was in the last 20 years
and even before that they blew up people,
they put bombs on themselves,
and just a killing, massacre,
they didn't have mercy on children,
They didn't have mercy on women.
They didn't have mercy on the children that were born in the hospital.
I mean, there is not such a thing that gives legitimacy to Taliban to have our own Afghanistan.
Now, Aziz and Chad, I just have two final questions for you.
First and foremost, do you have a message for President Biden one year after the 10th?
Taliban takeover?
Well, I mean, you know, I could sit here and point out all the mistakes that he's made
and the administration has made to create this situation.
But the one thing that I would encourage the president to do if I was given an audience
with them today would be to do the right thing and accelerate the process to get our
interpreters safely out of Afghanistan, out of the humanitarian centers around the world,
and to the United States.
These are people with the SIV processes.
that are in SME processes.
We know who they are.
They're contracted to the military.
We made an obligation and promised to them
that there was to be a nine-month process
to get them out.
And meanwhile, we have our southern border,
10,000 people that we don't know who they are
crossing the southern border every day freely
with open arms.
Why can't we in one week, in one week,
solve this problem and do the right thing?
It impacts our reputation around the world.
How could we ever trust a nation of people
to lock arms?
and fight for us in any other future war in the world, we continue to abandon our allies.
So I would encourage him in that. I would also encourage him in the fact that the Taliban
is not a government. They're not someone to be trusted. We recently seen this with Al-Zahari
walking around free and Al-Qaeda walking around free in Kabul just weeks ago, violating the Doha
agreement, which is a ridiculous agreement to have an agreement with terrorists, not to support
terrorism, but the Doha agreement needs to be just scrapped.
I mean, we cannot trust these people.
This is a terrorist safe haven.
It needs to be treated as such for the sake of the American people and for the sake of
the security around the world.
On my part, actually, it's a moral obligation for the United States government to save
and bring all those guys that served under the United States contract.
either directly or indirectly in Afghanistan for 20 years or more than that.
And as a result of that, they lost their house, their friends.
They lost everything.
Some of them are in Pakistan.
Their future is not clear.
Some of them are in Albania.
Their future is not clear.
Some of them are in Abu Dhabi, in Tajikistan, and some other neighboring countries like India and Iran.
So it's a very, it will be, it's a very good time that the, I'm asking the United States government that they should, as a government, as a United States government, they, they should achieve their moral obligation towards all those people that served with their military and government people shorter, shoulder in Afghanistan.
And then finally, can you talk about the future of Afghanistan?
What happens next?
A year after the country fell to the Taliban, what lies ahead?
It's a safe haven for terrorism.
I mean, we've seen that again with Auzahari last weeks ago.
Al-Qaeda is running around free.
This Doha agreement is a complete joke.
And it's a safe haven't for terrorism.
But not only is a safe haven't of terrorism,
It is the most strategic location on the map.
I mean, Afghanistan sits between Iraq, Iran, Russia, China, and it has Boggham Air Force Base.
They have access to billions of dollars, you know, rumored to be up to $85 billion in U.S. equipment technology.
We would assume it being sold to the to the Pakistanis, to Iranians, to the Chinese, maybe to Russia, whoever's the highest bidder.
And we know that the Chinese military has been occupying Bakrame Air Force base.
China and Iran is able to trade sanctioned oil across Afghanistan, which is what they want it all along.
China has the mineral rights to the Hindu Kush mineral right minerals in the like lithium and things like that.
This is complete disaster in this area.
So the future Afghanistan is a benefit to a beneficial scenario.
to all of our enemies, when I say all the enemies to the, not just the United States, but to the
free world. And that's just from a security standpoint. The future of Afghanistan, however, on a more
personal level, to the Afghan people, is a dark, dark place. 40 million Afghans have just become
slaves to the Taliban and their evil ideology that, as these mentioned. 20 million women and little
girls are going to be sexually enslaved. No more education in schools. No more women's rights.
they're going to be sold off. We know for a fact they already been sold off for as low as $400,
nine-year-old girls to 50-year-old men, completely disgusting. And while the world for the last few
years screamed about Me Too movements in Hollywood and things like this, the world has been
silent on these 20 million girls, and my heart bleats and breaks for them every day,
seeing how happy they were about to go to school and about to pursue careers and work in
government have a voice and be journalist and doctors and all these things, all that's gone.
And it seems like the world just doesn't care and is silent about it because they worried about
the pressure coming from censorship and these things.
It's the future Afghanistan is dark.
The world is much more dangerous place because of the decisions that we made in the exit of
Afghanistan.
And it's just, you know, I don't know, Samantha, how it's turned around with the current
administration.
Yeah, honestly, it's actually a very, it will have a dark future.
It's a place where the radical terrorist groups are re-emerging.
Like there was a news that some Uzbeks, they are coming, crossing the border and coming to Badakhshan province near the China.
There's some radical people from China, from Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan.
they meet a radical group and they're re-emerging over there.
The Al-Qaeda is over there.
The girls are oppressed.
There is no education for the girls.
In general, it will have a really bad negative impact on the whole world
if the world does not pay attention as quick as possible to Afghanistan.
Because right now, the control of the country is in the house.
of such an ignorant people that they only think that they are the pure and blessed children
of God, but the rest of the world is infidel for them.
Chad and Aziz, thank you so much for taking the time to speak with me today about the one-year
anniversary of Afghanistan falling to the Taliban.
I so appreciate you coming on.
And Aziz telling your story, Chad, going over the evacuation efforts and the logistics of it,
Thank you both so much. I really appreciate it.
Yeah, Samantha. One more thing before we go.
You know, Aziz is now a proud Texan.
Amazing.
And in January 17th, we'll be releasing the book through Thomas Nelson, Harper Collins,
Saving Aziz, which is the story of the withdrawal.
Aziz and I is long history and answering some of the questions more in depth that we talked about today.
And that'll do it for today's episode.
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