U.S. Veterans Urge Fair Treatment of Afghan Allies After Deadly Washington Shooting

Khaama Press

A deadly shooting near the White House involving an Afghan evacuee has intensified political scrutiny as U.S. veterans urge fair treatment of former allies.

Former intelligence and defense officials interviewed by NBC News stressed that Afghan partners played a critical role in counterterrorism operations over the past two decades. They warned that portraying the community as a security risk could harm future U.S. missions reliant on local support.

The fatal shooting of a U.S. National Guard member in Washington last week has triggered fresh debate over Afghan refugee resettlement, with former U.S. Special Forces urging Americans not to generalize or blame evacuees as a whole. The veterans say many Afghans who came to the United States after the Taliban takeover risked their lives assisting U.S. forces and should not be treated as suspects.

The suspect, Rahmanullah Lakhanwal, a 29-year-old Afghan national evacuated in 2021, was arrested shortly after the November 25 shooting near the White House. He appeared by video from a hospital bed and now faces murder and attempted-murder charges.

The case has already fueled political reaction. The U.S. President Donald Trump called for a review of the records of all Afghans evacuated after the Taliban’s return to power, heightening anxiety among thousands still waiting for permanent legal status.

Many Afghan evacuees include former soldiers, interpreters, activists and journalists who fled Taliban reprisals after the fall of Kabul. Veterans and advocacy groups say they are facing severe challenges, including legal uncertainty, unemployment, untreated trauma and limited access to healthcare.

Advocates say the shooting, while tragic, is an isolated criminal case and should not be used to justify broad suspicion or policy rollbacks affecting thousands of Afghan allies still struggling to rebuild their lives in the United States.

U.S. Veterans Urge Fair Treatment of Afghan Allies After Deadly Washington Shooting