US offers asylum lifeline to Afghan war hero as UK refuses to recognise his military service

The US is formally investigating whether to give safe haven to the Afghan pilot whom UK officials are threatening to deport to Rwanda, sparking fury from top politicians and military figures who said it “shameful” for Britain to turn its back on the war hero.

The former air force lieutenant, who flew multiple combat missions alongside coalition forces, has been living in limbo for months after coming to the UK on a small boat while his wife and child hide from the Taliban in Afghanistan.

There was shock at defence secretary Ben Wallace’s refusal to intervene after the pilot’s application to the UK’s Afghan refugee scheme was rejected this week – leaving him with the prospect of a one-way flight to Rwanda.

While British officials have refused to intervene to halt Home Office deportation threat, the US State Department is now considering his and his family’s asylum application after The Independent first raised his case.

Lord Dannatt, former head of the British Army, said the fact that the pilot had been “cast off” by the British for the US to handle was “a complete abrogation of our responsibilities and our decency”.

Air Marshal Edward Stringer, commander of RAF air operations during the Afghan conflict, said the UK government was making a “weaselling distinction” over the pilot’s war record.

Former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith said for Britain to “turn its back on a pilot” and fail to “do what is necessary to keep to the covenant that we protect his life as he helped to protect ours is shameful”.

Sir Iain told The Independent: “Without heroes like this pilot who is now seeking our help to stay here we would not be able to fight causes which matter to democratic governments who fight for freedom.”

He added: “We were allies and comrades in arms to those who helped the coalition and now they have themselves and their family at risk from the Taliban we have failed our pledge we gave to stand by them. To see America stand in for us and do the decent thing is galling and shameful.”

Labour said the Rishi Sunak’s government appeared to be operating “Operation Cold Shoulder” to Afghan heroes, describing the intervention by the US as “deeply embarrassing”.

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The airman, who flew more than 30 sorties against terrorist threats which were planned by British and US commanders, was described as a “true patriot to his nation” by his US supervisor.

But the Ministry of Defence has rejected his application to stay in the UK under the Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy (Arap) – aimed at getting those who helped British forces out of the country.

The government said it did not accept his role had “resulted in a high and imminent risk of a threat to your life”. The MoD also said it does not accept that Britain’s operations in would have been “materially less efficient or materially less successful” without him.

Although category 4 of the Arap scheme is aimed at those “closely supporting and assisting” British forces – thought to be his best chance of staying in the UK – officials deemed the pilot ineligible.

Senior military figures are disappointed that Mr Wallace – rumoured to be angling for the job of Nato secretary general – has not rushed to the aid of the Afghan pilot who helped coalition forces against the Taliban.

The Afghan pilot has called on Rishi Sunak to stop his deportation and help him bring his family to the UK (Holy Bancroft)
The Afghan pilot has called on Rishi Sunak to stop his deportation and help him bring his family to the UK (Holy Bancroft)

“This is a very disappointing decision – justified on very narrow grounds,” Lord Dannatt told The Independent. “Are we denying he fought against the Taliban? This is a most ungenerous decision which sits uncomfortably with common decency.

“He came to this country, trusting in the decency of the British, by the only means available to him and now seems doomed to be deported to Rwanda. To cast him off as America’s problem is a complete abrogation of our responsibilities and our decency.”

Air Marshal Stringer said: “Whether we had a de jure contract with these Afghan servicemen or not seems a weaselling distinction on which to fall back.

“The de facto contract was that we encouraged Afghans to join the security services and fight alongside us to achieve our ends - putting themselves at risk from regressive and dangerous forces such as the Taliban.”

He added: “When we removed the cover we had promised them we left them dreadfully exposed. What weight does our moral authority carry when we weasel out of our obligations; and why should we expect people to trust us in future?”

Dozens of military chiefs, politicians and celebrities have backed The Independent’s call to allow him and other Afghan veterans who helped coalition forces to be given safe refuge.

Lord Dannatt has backed Afghan pilot’s case (David Parker/AFP/Getty Images)
Lord Dannatt has backed Afghan pilot’s case (David Parker/AFP/Getty Images)

After serving alongside coalition forces, the pilot received two personal recommendations as to his strength of character and the role he played in fighting the Taliban in the years leading up to the fall of Kabul in August 2021.

He has now been accepted onto the US’s P1 resettlement scheme, for which you have to be personally approved by a US official. There is no guarantee that he will be offered asylum and the process can take years, but he has entered the assessment stage.

Now living in Home Office accommodation in the UK, the pilot is despairing at his situation and said that the decision he made to risk his life for the coalition was his biggest regret.

“We made the biggest mistake in my life when we cooperated with the American forces and British forces, and now we have to suffer the pain of being stateless, far from family, humiliation and misery,” he said.

He is also growing increasingly worried for the safety of his family, as he waits to hear the outcome of a seperate asylum application to the Home Office.

Officials at home secretary Suella Braverman’s department warned him he could be sent to Rwanda because his Channel journey is deemed illegal. He has been given 90 days to appeal the decision to turn him down for the Arap scheme.

The pilot flew combat mission alongside organised by coalition forces in Afghanistan (The Independent)
The pilot flew combat mission alongside organised by coalition forces in Afghanistan (The Independent)

A number of Afghans who helped American forces before the US withdrew from Afghanistan — including the pilot — were referred to the scheme by their US supervisors directly after the fall of Kabul.

But aside from being asked to fill out a form with more details, the pilot heard nothing more from the State Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration.

However, last month White House said it would investigate his case when approached by The Independent and his case has been confirmed in the system.

During his trip to Washington last week, Mr Sunak ignored questions about the pilot from The Independent as he arrived at the White House to meet president Joe Biden. He also declined to address a similar question at the end of a joint press conference with Mr Biden later that day.

Labour’s shadow immigration minister Stephen Kinnock said: “Britain has a moral obligation to these Afghans, yet Operation Warm Welcome has become Operation Cold Shoulder.”

“The fact that the British government is trying to send a loyal-to-Britain Afghan pilot to Rwanda is a tragedy in itself, while the US government’s intervention is deeply embarrassing evidence of just how far the UK’s international reputation is being tarnished by the shameful behaviour of this callous and chaotic Conservative government.”

Armed Forces minister James Heappey has said that members of the Afghan forces, such as the pilot, do not qualify “in principle” for the MoD’s scheme, which was initially set up to help those Afghans who were employed by the British Army.

A government spokesperson said it remained committed to protecting vulnerable and at-risk people fleeing Afghanistan and so far have brought around 24,500 people to the UK.

“We continue to work with likeminded partners and countries neighbouring Afghanistan on resettlement issues, and to support safe passage for eligible Afghans,” the spokesperson said.