Skip to content
Loading Events

« All Events

  • This event has passed.

Take Action today: Urge Representative today and urge them to add their name as a signer to this critical letter on Afghanistan’s famine.

December 9, 2021 @ 8:00 am - December 10, 2021 @ 5:00 pm

From National Peace Action:
Please call your Representative today and urge them to add their name as a signer to this critical letter on Afghanistan’s famine.
Here’s all you need to do –
1. Dial the Congressional switchboard at 202-224-3121.
2. Ask to speak to your Representative.
3.Once connected, say (in your own words as much as you can):
“Hello, my name is (your name) and I am a constituent from (your city) and I am a member of Peace Action. I am calling because I want to ask __________ [name of Representative] to sign on to the Congressional sign-on letter Representative Jayapal is circulating regarding Afghanistan and the humanitarian crisis there. The letter asks President Biden to end the harsh economic sanctions, asset freezes, and other measures that are creating an economic and humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan.
I am happy that the U.S. has pulled U.S. troops out of Afghanistan after 20 years, but I am disturbed by the reports of severe hunger and economic collapse coming out of Afghanistan. We should be supporting the Afghan people with aid, not causing more suffering after many years of war.”
Thank you to all of you who can make this call. I’ve been writing a lot lately, but that’s because peace issues are being voted on in Congress a lot these days!
By blocking transfers from the roughly $9.5 billion in Afghanistan Central Bank accounts in the U.S. the Biden administration is starving the Afghan economy of oxygen. The Taliban are brutal and oppressive, and the administration may need to map out a strategy to deal with that. But destroying the entire nation’s economy is not the way to address that. Many Afghans and aid organizations on the ground are asking the U.S. to take a more compassionate path. Cratering the Afghan economy, which is what many economists worry is happening, doesn’t just target the Taliban. It destabilizes the entire country and harms the health and wellbeing of millions.
Winter can always be harsh in Afghanistan. But the pictures of suffering and deprivation coming out of Afghanistan right now are heartbreaking. U.S. foreign policy should not include holding a whole nation hostage because we have issues with the government that took over when we left Afghanistan.

Content of Letter:

Reps. Jayapal, Jacobs, Garcia: Letter to Avert Afghan Starvation, Economic Collapse and Protect National Security Interests

Deadline: Friday, December 10th, COB

A harrowing Dec. 4th New York Times report, “Facing Economic Collapse, Afghanistan Is Gripped by Starvation,” warned that the impending death toll from hunger this winter “would dwarf the total number of Afghan civilians estimated to have been killed as a direct result of the war over the past 20 years.” We invite you to join us in signing a letter to President Biden urging him to take steps proposed by humanitarian and civil-society leaders, Afghan businesses, and central-bank officials appointed under the U.S.-backed government to ensure that U.S. policy does not precipitate an economic collapse that could cause 1 million children to die from starvation, lead to universal poverty, produce a migrant crisis, and threaten core national security interests.

The letter notes that without immediate action to carefully modify the U.S. policy that restricts all access to Afghanistan’s hard currency reserves, banks and private businesses will close down and prices on basic items will skyrocket, plunging the country — which relies overwhelmingly on imports that require hard currency — deeper into a catastrophic humanitarian crisis. Our letter raises proposals by the Afghan Chamber of Commerce and Investment and the Afghanistan Banks Association to ease the U.S. freeze $9.4 billion in Afghan foreign reserves currently held in the U.S., which will be overwhelmingly used for purchases of imports by Afghanistan’s private sector. It also calls for further clarification of U.S. sanctions that deter financial, business and humanitarian organizations from serving Afghan needs, and urges the U.S. to work with the IMF to allow Afghanistan access to emergency financing aimed at alleviating the impacts of the pandemic.

This letter reiterates that combating the Taliban government’s grave violation of human rights, particularly against women, girls, and the LGBTQ community, must continue to be among our very highest priorities, and notes that experts believe that engagement around hard currency access is an opportunity for leverage used to secure human rights improvements. A failure to engage on this issue, however, not only risks humanitarian devastation but also directly threatens U.S. national security interests,  potentially resulting in the Taliban’s retrenchment from U.S. engagement and cooperation on counterterrorism the rise of ungoverned spaces that will produce fertile ground for militant groups. The letter emphasizes that U.S. economic policy should not undermine the national-security imperative of seeking stability in Afghanistan and minimize the risk of threats emanating from the country.

As Mary-Ellen McGroarty, the World Food Program’s country director for Afghanistan told the Times, “We need to separate the politics from the humanitarian imperative. The millions of women, of children, of men in the current crisis in Afghanistan are innocent people who are being condemned to a winter of absolute desperation and potentially death.”

Sincerely,

Pramila Jayapal                      Sara Jacobs                             Jesús G. “Chuy” García

Member of Congress              Member of Congress              Member of Congress

December XX, 2021

Dear Mr. President:

We strongly support your decision to bring the longest war in the history of our nation to a close. We are grateful for your administration’s efforts to evacuate Afghans that worked with coalition forces and other at-risk groups, and we fully support your initiatives to continue and strengthen that assistance for those seeking relief.

As you transition into a new phase of our relationship with the country and people of Afghanistan, we stand with Afghan leaders, American allies, and humanitarian experts in urging the United States to avoid harsh economic measures that will directly harm Afghan families and children. This means conscientiously but urgently modifying current U.S. policy regarding the freeze of Afghanistan’s foreign reserves and ongoing sanctions.

United Nations officials are warning that millions of Afghans could run out of food before winter, with 1 million children at risk of starvation.[1] “After decades of war, suffering and insecurity, [Afghans] face perhaps their most perilous hour,” said UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, who implored countries “to take action and inject liquidity into the Afghan economy to avoid collapse.”[2] World Food Programme surveys indicate that 95 percent of Afghan households are not consuming enough food.[3] Afghanistan will face “universal poverty by the middle of next year,” with the poverty rate expected to rise from 72 percent to as high as 98 percent.[4] Afghanistan’s economic pain and humanitarian collapse both threaten to trigger a new refugee crisis throughout the region.

For these reasons, we are deeply concerned by the continued U.S. freeze of Afghanistan’s foreign reserves, the International Monetary Fund (IMF)’s choice to deny Afghanistan access to special reserve assets intended to help developing countries alleviate the impact of the pandemic, and U.S. sanctions’ impacts on Afghanistan. The U.S. confiscation of $9.4 billion in Afghanistan’s currency reserves held in the United States is contributing to soaring inflation and the shuttering of commercial banks and vital private businesses, plunging the country — which relies overwhelmingly on imports that require hard currency — deeper into economic and humanitarian crisis.

Current and former Afghan central bank officials appointed by the U.S.-supported government advocate for providing Afghanistan’s central bank access to hard currency reserves.[5] We urge you to consider these proposals, supported by private sector associations such as the Afghan Chamber of Commerce and Investment and the Afghanistan Banks Association, to quickly ease restrictions on the country’s access to reserves.[6] We also urge you to work with the IMF to similarly allow access to the emergency financing that was recently allocated for Afghanistan.

No increase in food and medical aid can compensate for the macroeconomic harm of soaring prices of basic commodities, a banking collapse, a balance-of-payments crisis, a freeze on civil servants’ salaries, and other severe consequences that are rippling throughout Afghan society, harming the most vulnerable.

We deplore the new Taliban government’s responsibility for grave human rights abuses, crackdowns on civil society and repression of women and LGBTQ people. However, pragmatic U.S. engagement with the de facto authorities is nevertheless key to averting unprecedented harm to tens of millions of women, children and innocent civilians. Punitive economic policies will not meaningfully weaken Taliban leaders, who will be shielded from the direst consequences, while the overwhelming impact of these measures will fall on innocent Afghans who have already suffered decades of war and poverty.

It is also important to clarify that the overwhelming majority of reserves returned to the central bank of Afghanistan will be used primarily to purchase imports by Afghanistan’s private sector, which comprises the dominant share of Afghanistan’s economy. By denying international reserves to Afghanistan’s private sector—including more than $7 billion belonging to Afghanistan and deposited at the Federal Reserve—the U.S. government is impacting the general population. We fear, as aid groups do, that maintaining this policy could cause more civilian deaths in the coming year than were lost in 20 years of war.[7]

We are also deeply concerned that sanctions against Taliban officials now in charge of governmental functions are creating a chilling effect for financial institutions and aid organizations serving Afghanistan. While we appreciate recent U.S. moves to enable a number of these entities to continue to operate in Afghanistan,[8] we ask that you provide more explicit reassurances regarding permitted activities, including by providing long-sought “safe harbors” or “comfort letters” to both U.S. and non-U.S. based entities operating in the country.[9]

There is no doubt that the Taliban’s new authority presents a serious challenge to human rights, including the rights of women and girls in Afghanistan. The protection of those rights must continue to be among our very highest priorities. Your recent direct talks with Taliban leaders in Doha and open lines of communication may be one of the best ways to influence their behavior and protect both vulnerable Afghans and U.S. interests. Ongoing engagement with the Taliban to coordinate access to urgently needed hard currency can provide the necessary leverage to secure human rights improvements.

Finally, a failure to maintain open communication not only risks humanitarian devastation but also directly threatens U.S. national security interests. An economic collapse could result in the Taliban’s retrenchment from U.S. engagement and cooperation on counterterrorism, create ungoverned spaces, and enable resentment against the U.S., producing fertile ground for groups like ISIS to gain strength and use the territory as a staging ground for plots against the U.S. and its allies. U.S. economic policy should not undermine the national-security imperative of seeking stability in Afghanistan, and instead should minimize the risk of threats emanating from the country.

“We need to separate the politics from the humanitarian imperative,” urges World Food Program country director for Afghanistan Mary-Ellen McGroarty. “The millions of women, of children, of men in the current crisis in Afghanistan are innocent people who are being condemned to a winter of absolute desperation and potentially death.”[10] We stand ready to work closely with you as you expeditiously review current U.S. policy in light of the extraordinary economic and humanitarian risks confronting the people of Afghanistan. We respectfully ask that you consider the aforementioned measures to protect vulnerable civilians and U.S. national security interests.

Sincerely,

[Members of Congress]

 

Details

Start:
December 9, 2021 @ 8:00 am
End:
December 10, 2021 @ 5:00 pm