Afghan Translator Who Helped Save Biden's Life Makes it Out of Afghanistan



Biden's life was secured by an interpreter who later found himself hiding from the Taliban.
He and His family had been left behind but the guys he worked with did not forget him.
Soldiers in Afghanistan transported out of the country one of their own
 



When Aman Khalili signed up to work with the US military in Afghanistan he knew the risk he was taking. It made him a target for the Taliban and placed him and his family at risk. But that risk seemed worth the gamble to provide for that family, safe in the knowledge the US would be a long-term presence in his country. 

The work, kept secret from many, did provide for the family and in the years that followed he stayed in touch with those he’d served with as his children grew, his girls went to school and Afghanistan enjoyed a semblance of stability. 

He stopped looking over his shoulder, the fear he might be found out abated.

Aman Khalili's children are united with the families in the US who helped save them.Credit: ITV News

All that changed in August when President Joe Biden announced the end of America’s longest war. Normality was gone, the troops were gone, the Taliban was back.

Overnight the fear returned, the risk was back and magnified. 

His girls, who had enjoyed their freedoms, were confined to the house. Their education at an end, their hopes, their futures in jeopardy. So too their lives and their father’s. He was now one of the hunted. They had no choice but to try and flee.

Every Afghan who worked with coalition forces knew their peril. 

Aman Khalili faced a greater threat. He had been the interpreter who was part of the mission to rescue then-Senator, Joe Biden, when snow forced his helicopter to the ground on a remote pass. 

That made the father-of-five a trophy for the Taliban.

Aman Khalili had been the interpreter on the mission to rescue then-Senator Joe Biden.Credit: ITV News

He turned to the men he had served with, their motto “Leave No Man Behind” was about to be tested.

What followed was a plea from Afghanistan to Arizona, secret calls, code names, covert journeys, and a 144-hour dash through Taliban territory to the Pakistan border, a flight to Qatar, and finally a flight to the United States.

Seven months on the whole family are safe and beginning a new life. Those Aman served withstood true to their pledge to leave no man behind.

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