Al Jazeera
 
Iraqis who aided US left behind  and fearful 
Long delays for visas mean thousands of former interpreters  for US remain 
in Iraq, afraid of assassination
 
_Gregg  Carlstrom_ (http://www.aljazeera.com/profile/gregg-carlstrom.html)  
Last Modified: 18 Dec 2011
 
    Iraqis who aided  US left behind and fearful      
 
Long delays for visas  mean thousands of former interpreters for US remain 
in Iraq, afraid of  assassination.

_Gregg  Carlstrom_ (http://www.aljazeera.com/profile/gregg-carlstrom.html)  
Last Modified: 18 Dec  2011


    Iraqis who aided  US left behind and fearful      
 
Long delays for visas  mean thousands of former interpreters for US remain 
in Iraq, afraid of  assassination.

_Gregg  Carlstrom_ (http://www.aljazeera.com/profile/gregg-carlstrom.html)  
Last Modified: 18 Dec  2011


 
BAGHDAD – It was supposed to be a simple deal: Work with the  American 
occupation here for one year, and earn a visa to resettle in the United  
States. 
John put in 27 months as a linguist and adviser, both with the military and 
 with a Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) attached to the US embassy in  
Baghdad. Last November, midway through his tenure with the Americans, he 
applied  for a visa under a special State Department programme. 
Thirteen months later, he is still waiting for an answer, and worries that 
he  might be killed before he gets one: The Iraqi government has been 
gathering  details about people who worked with the US military, and John fears 
that  information could be leaked to armed groups; and he has received several 
 anonymous, harassing phone calls from people who know about his work  
history. 
“It’s a fact to these people, we betrayed our country, anyone who worked 
with  the Americans,” he said in an interview. “They think we don’t even 
deserve to be  Iraqi.” 
Huge backlogs 
As the last US troops depart Iraq this month, they leave behind thousands 
of  former colleagues, like John, who thought they would have emigrated by 
now.  (John is not his real name, of course; he asked to remain anonymous, 
both to  protect his safety in Iraq and his visa application in the United 
States.) 
More than 140,000 Iraqis worked with the United States during the nearly  
nine-year war and occupation., and tens of thousands have since applied for  
immigration visas in the United States. 
The US issued only a handful in the early years of the war. A law passed in 
 2008 created the Special Immigrant Visas (SIV) programme, which was 
supposed to  expedite the process: It allocated 25,000 visas over five years 
for 
Iraqis who  worked with Americans and face an “ongoing threat” in their home 
country. 
But four years later, only about 7,000 of those visas have been issued,  
according to the State Department, with more than 30,000 applications pending 
a  decision. 
The process has become especially slow this year, after the Obama  
administration started requiring more detailed background checks for visa  
applicants. Just nine people received visas under the SIV programme during the  
entire month of April. 
“We’re concerned about anybody who’s at risk in this country,” said James 
 Jeffrey, the US ambassador here. “We have programmes that allow some of 
them to  travel to the US, and huge backlogs in these programmes, that’s true…
 a lot of  it is the processing back in Washington.” 
Iraqis who worked with the US say those risks are escalating now that the  
last American troops are preparing to leave. 
“All of the people around me know that I was working with the Americans,”  
said Mark, another former PRT adviser. “Anybody who was against the US 
troops, I  feel that I am in danger from them.” 
The average wait for the SIV programme is now more than nine months, even 
for  those Iraqis with clean records and good recommendations. John’s visa  
application paperwork, which was reviewed by Al Jazeera, includes a glowing  
letter from his supervisor, who described him as a “reliable professional 
with  great integrity”. 
A separate “threat statement” outlined the dangers he faces if he remains 
in  Iraq, noting that he has received several threats from members of Jaish  
al-Mahdi, a Shia militia. 
“These insurgent groups and some of the local Iraqi population consider 
[him]  a traitor,” the statement said. 
'This is crazy' 
And so they wait, thousands of them, often in hiding. The Iraqi newspaper  
Sabah al-Jadid reported last month that many former interpreters were  
throwing away any paperwork that identifies them as such. 
Of a half-dozen interpreters contacted for this story, only two were 
willing  to discuss their situation. 
“For nine months I am jobless, waiting for that visa. I have nothing to do,”
  Mark said. 
Others have fled the country: More than 18,000 Iraqis who applied for the 
SIV  programme are currently in neighbouring Syria and Jordan, according to 
the  United Nations. 
Mark, who worked for more than two years with reconstruction teams in 
Baghdad  and Anbar provinces, has been waiting nearly ten months for a visa; he 
was  interviewed for the SIV programme in March, and has heard little from 
the  embassy since. 
“They said we should wait at least six months, but this is crazy,” he 
said.  “All the people around me know that I was working with the Americans. We 
feel  that we are in danger from anyone who was against the US troops.” 
Neither the Iraqi nor American governments have kept detailed statistics, 
but  more than 300 Iraqis who worked with the US have been killed since the 
war  began. 
They are targeted by a variety of armed groups, both Sunni and Shia. John  
said he has received several calls this year from people with detailed  
information – not just that he worked for the Americans, but where he worked,  
and what he advised them on. 
“They’ll call and say, ‘hi, is this John from the PRT?’” but using his 
real  name, John said. “And they’ll say, we need you to come up to Tarmiya,” 
a  neighbourhood where his unit used to work. 
He suspects that someone sold the information to an armed group. Provincial 
 reconstruction teams used to spend heavily – buying greenhouses for 
farmers, for  example – but that money has dried up as the teams closed down. 
“So after we’re done… then okay, there’s not any more interest in the  
relationship, so they give it [the information] to whoever will pay,” he said. 
 “I don’t feel safe… I’m afraid of these groups, and the Iraqi 
government, I  don’t trust at all.”

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