CLAY: We’re joined now by Chad Robichaux, former Force Recon Marine and Aziz — an interpreter he rescued from Afghanistan — inspiring a new book, Saving Aziz: How the Mission to Help One Became a Calling to Rescue Thousands from the Taliban. Also, Save Our Allies has been founded by Chad, a nonprofit that evacuated 17,000 people from Afghanistan. Currently operates in Ukraine as well. Chad and Aziz are in our New York City studio right now. We appreciate you guys being here. And, Chad, I will start with you. Many people, I think, have forgotten about the chaos that came with our evacuation from Afghanistan. But since we left there, there are reports that thousands of people who have connections to America — who’ve worked for American soldiers — are still stuck behind in Afghanistan. What have you seen and what can you tell us about the situation on the ground in Afghanistan right now?
ROBICHAUX: Yeah, unfortunately, I don’t believe this is… Not by accident that it’s been not just forgotten but swept under the rug and the mainstream media has really been reluctant to report on it. And I think the White House has done everything they could to hide this story. We still have 75,000 of our interpreters that are qualified for SIV, Special Immigrant Visa, program and not only qualify, but were promised by our government for their service to us for 20 years. They’re still in Afghanistan as well as other lily pad countries around the world.
In addition to that, we have their family members and each of them are vulnerable. You’re talking about 300,000 people that have served the American effort in Afghanistan and all of them are vulnerable. They’re being systematically hunted down, pulled out of their homes at night, beaten, tortured, killed, and executed for their service to our country. And, you know, we have a State Department is refusing to acknowledge it and to do the right thing. And it’s still happening every day.
BUCK: Hey, Chad, it’s Buck. Really appreciate you joining us. And thank you for your service, sir. What would you like to see the Biden administration do? I mean, if you could get a sit down with Biden and, you know, top national security apparatus folks, what do you think is the path forward if they were to get serious and engage on this issue and keep the word of the American government that was given to those who were helping people like you who were serving our country in uniform in Afghanistan?
And the entire international community was participating at Bagram Air Force Base — the most strategic place in the globe between Iraq, Iran, Russia, and China — and for us to give that up, for saying we have to move out 20,000 of our 104,000 troops. Meanwhile, we have 80,000 troops in Japan and 40,000 troops in Germany since World War Two, with 35 troops in South Korea since World War Two. These contingencies keep the world safe and make us and keep us out of future wars. And we were… We didn’t negotiate with our international allies. We didn’t negotiate with NATO. We didn’t negotiate with the Afghan government we put in place for 20 years.
We only negotiated with the Taliban and handed our — handed that strategic location over to the Taliban without supporting the Afghan government we put in place, and it created a complete collapse. So, to answer your question right now, it’s very difficult to do the right thing because of the situation that was created. I think the only thing that could be done now is for the State Department to have a clear process for SAV applicants, for P1/P2 visas that qualify for a pathway to citizenship based on their service to America.
CLAY: Chad, I know there’s many reasons you’re doing what you are doing for the people left behind in Afghanistan. But also, Aziz — who was sitting with you right now — saved your life. What is that story?
And in, you know, through eight deployments — which we did together to keep the continuity — he became my friend. He saved my life multiple times. He probably saved my life every day, like, “Don’t walk there. Don’t eat that. Don’t talk to that person. If you talk right now, they’re going to kill us.” Like, he saved my life every day. And when we got done operating in the mountains of Afghanistan or across the border in Pakistan, I didn’t go to base and he went home. I went home with him. Our first hot meal I had that’s called mountains was by his wife, Hatra, and then I was there when Mashood and Mashooda, his oldest son and daughter, were born, and I held them as babies.
Like, he’s family to me, and so to leave him there during their withdrawal was something I could never have lived with. I mean, I had to go and help him. We put it small team together to go — originally to just go — and get Aziz, and as you’re putting his team together — you know, most incredible special operations guys that I knew and veterans I trusted, about twelve of us — one of us pointed out a really great good point, that I was being a little selfish to go get my friend it. There were other people, other interpreters, American citizens — women, children, Christians that’d be persecuted — that needed help, too, and we made a decision in that moment. I believe… We’re all pretty strong people of faith. We believe that God was really just burdening our hearts to do the right thing and help these people and we made a decision to be obedient to that burden and say yes to go. And then and beyond that, we… I believe we witnessed a divine miracle happen in the next three days that made it possible to not just rescue Aziz and his family, but 70,000 people.
ROBICHAUX: Absolutely.
CLAY: Thanks to Aziz as well. Appreciate you guys being in-studio.
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