April 26, 2024

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Ex-US fighter mobilizes special operation to rescue Afghans |  Globalism

Ex-US fighter mobilizes special operation to rescue Afghans | Globalism

History of the former US Army Chris Rubishaw looks like a movie. For 30 years he was a member of the US Special Forces, Take part in secret missions, fight several wars And for those who talk to him, he is physically similar to Rambo – without the headband and a few inches shorter.

“Sylvester Stallone is also short,” jokes the military man, amused in comparison to the actor who played, in fiction, a green hat like him.

Like a screen star, Robishaw devised a fascinating and risky operation. He used his experience from six periods of occupation in Afghanistan to prepare it with other ex-combatants ‘Parallel’ Afghan rescue mission. While ex-militaries and spies devised similar projects, but charged a ticket, his idea was to rescue people for free, in a purely humanitarian way, using some loopholes at the Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, where yesterday, after (a) in a frantic rush of rescue operations during the The past 16 days, the last US plane bid farewell to a 20-year war, leaving the country in the arms of the Taliban.

Hundreds of people, some carrying documents, gather near a checkpoint around Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan, on August 26, 2021 – Photo: Wali Sabawoon/AP

for team Globo TV In Bahrain, the base of the operation, he says, the plan was captured by the American NGO Ark Salus. The proposal was to charter commercial planes, call in retired pilots and use a network of communications to open up space on the runway at the Afghan airport, and create a private airlift, foreign to any government, to save Afghan families and soldiers who fought privately. Shoulder to shoulder with the American and his colleagues.

It was a risky gamble, which still counts on another trump card: persuading the government of Bahrain, an archipelago attached to Saudi Arabia and ruled by a rigid dynasty, to take in refugees after a three-hour journey.

Instead of fighting for people’s shelter and logistical support, the challenge will be to counter the resistance of countries in the region to take a public stand at this time – a position that, in the case of Rubishaw’s appeal, means conveying the message that Bahrain was helping to save people from the Taliban, a feared group You will become a new major player in the region, with unlimited power and influence.

American Chris Rubishaw mobilized a special rescue operation to get Afghans out of Kabul – Photo: TV Globo

The American says that the Bahraini authorities, led by Sheikh Mohammed Hamad Mohammed Al Khalifa, silently agreed to help. There was a permit for the military base of the Public Security Service, in the country’s desert, where an American center also operates, to receive Ark Salus planes. With this deal, the movie’s mission started to come into play, at least for a while.

The initial plan to rescue the Afghan soldiers and their families failed. When it was time to board the plane, confusion reigned. And whoever appeared first, without the imagined standard, rode. According to him, those who took part in the mission were so shocked by what they saw that they would not even be able to give an interview.

However, the problems had only just begun. The movie, which was originally an action and adventure, started to turn into a drama. Robishaw and Ark Salus hoped to save thousands of people. The press was told that two luxury hotels in Bahrain would receive huge groups of refugees. An international operation to use the collected funds began to spin. Doctors and psychologists from the United States were sent to the Middle Eastern archipelago.

Map showing the Afghan rescue operation – Photo: G1

After the first flights, the political scenario changed. blast near Kabul airport last Thursday, was the trigger. Tensions increased in the region – and the United States closed its doors. Collaboration with the Rubishaw entity waned, which was dependent on access to the Kabul airport, the military base in Bahrain, and the American position in the archipelago. People associated with the project also believe that the country’s sheikh, fearing that refugees would end up on his island, decided to withdraw from the operation and leave passenger traffic confined to the Americans.

“We’ve been guided by our moral obligation to do a good job and save many lives,” he says. “So my primary feelings are still sadness.” “And I think my second emotion was frustration, because we weren’t able to do more. I was frustrated because our plan wasn’t as effective as I had imagined,” he says.

However, the former Green Hat feels that he is, above all, proud of what he has done. “We did what seemed impossible weeks ago. I’m so proud of our organization, and I’m flattered to be a part of it and for the good we’ve done,” explains the ex-military who, in his spare time, is also a Hollywood war film consultant.