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Fleeing Afghanistan: From Kabul to Ramstein in Germany — but what then?

  • September 17, 2021

Ramstein, Germany. At last. For two years, Zarah* had been in hiding in Afghanistan before she and her three small daughters made it from Kabul to Qatar in a breakneck operation on one of the last evacuation planes at the end of August. 

After that came the flight to Germany, to her husband, who had worked for years for a German development aid organization as a local worker and was waiting for Zarah to join him.

He was supposed to fill out the paperwork at Ramstein, southwestern Germany, the largest US airbase outside the United States, and then, finally united as a family, start a new life. After all, the most difficult part of the journey, fleeing her homeland, was already behind her. What could go wrong?

German bureaucracy

But that did not work out. Zarah is now thousands of miles away in Indiana, in the US Midwest, in a camp with 6,000 other refugees. “It’s crazy. You get the feeling it’s a bit like a lottery where people end up,” one staff member at a German aid organization that has been dealing with Zarah’s husband’s case for years, who told DW the family’s story and who wishes to remain anonymous. 

The US flew tens of thousands of people out of Afghanistan in August, as did several European nations after the Taliban seized control of Kabul. Ramstein is still serving as a hub for those people, with 9,000 people currently on the ground.

Zarah, an Afghan, spent five days at the US base, during which she and the aid organization accumulated a long list of institutions she asked for help to stay: The Interior Ministry, the district government of a small German town, the registration office for foreigners in Germany, the German Corporation for International Cooperation (GIZ), the German Embassy in Qatar, and the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees. To no avail. The problem was that her husband’s asylum case had not yet been processed, so he has not yet been able to apply for family reunification.

Ralf Hechler, the mayor of Ramstein-Miesenbach, says cooperation with the US military has always been good

When things go badly and German bureaucracy gets in the way, as it did with Zarah, Afghan refugees are flown on elsewhere, often for security checks, to a place where they may never have wanted to land: Albania or even Rwanda. From there, they can continue their journey to the United States. If things go smoothly, Ramstein becomes the hub for a happy ending.

Mega tent city in Germany

The US military base in southwestern Germany resembles a fortress these days; it is almost impossible to gain access to the huge tent city, which has been set up for tens of thousands of Afghan refugees in record time.

Ralf Hechler is one of the few to have been allowed onto the site. The base’s commander, General Joshua Olson, gave him a ride in his car. “You can’t imagine it, you have to see it,” Hechler says. “Two and a half kilometers of tent upon tent, shower containers, brand new toilets, water supply. And a third of the refugees were children and teenagers.” Some 70 female soldiers from the German Bundeswehr are being specially deployed to Ramstein to look after Afghan women and children.

Aerial view of an Afghan refugee camp inside the US military base in Ramstein

Hechler has been mayor of Ramstein-Miesenbach for five years, making him the first neighbor of the 1,400-hectare airbase. German-American friendship is in his blood: His great-grandfather once returned to Germany from New York and settled in Ramstein, and now he is the man General Olson calls first when even the US logistics department reaches its limits.

That was the case in the first days of the evacuation of Afghan refugees when suddenly thousands of people had to be fed from one day to the next. “We then drove 6,000 meals to the barracks — vegetable lasagna, cheese spaetzle, stuffed peppers, all vegetarian.”

Hechler gets into the fire truck four times on a Sunday to take the meals to the US base. The mayor also launched an appeal on Facebook, and, just a few hours later, mountains of clothing, food, and toys for the refugees piled up downtown.

Some 2,350 people from Ramstein alone do civilian work at the airfield. There is probably no place in Germany that has been so closely linked to the US since the military base began operations nearly 70 years ago. Every store in town, no matter how small, advertises in German and English; there are now more than 50,000 US forces living with their families in the surrounding Kaiserslautern region.

  • The history of US troops in Germany

    High-ranking visit at Ramstein military air base

    There are almost 35,000 US soldiers stationed in Germany — mostly in the west and south of the country. Nowhere else in Europe are there so many American troops. But now US President Donald Trump wants to change that, withdrawing some 12,000 soldiers from the country. It would be a major test for the military alliance between Germany and the US.

  • The history of US troops in Germany

    From victor to defender

    The American military presence in Germany began at the end of World War II. Along with its allies, the US had liberated Germany from the Nazis. However, their wartime ally, the Soviet Union, soon became an enemy. The tensions between the two sides were demonstrated when US Army and Soviet Union tanks faced off in a divided Berlin.

  • The history of US troops in Germany

    GI Elvis Presley

    The US soldiers also brought American culture to Germany. The King of Rock ‘n’ Roll, as Elvis Presley would eventually become known, was drafted in as a soldier and began his military service in Germany in 1958. He is seen here waving to his fans at Bremerhaven train station.

  • The history of US troops in Germany

    Building a home

    Over the years the US Army has become firmly entrenched in the German landscape. Dotted around US bases are numerous residential districts for American soldiers and their families, such as this residential district in Wiesbaden-Erbenheim. This often creates barriers to their full integration into German society. The US Army employed 17,000 American civilians in Germany in 2019.

  • The history of US troops in Germany

    Encounters

    Despite separate residential districts, there has always been contact and exchange between German and American families. In the early years, dances were held on the streets of Berlin in summer months and in winter, the US Army organized Christmas parties for local children. And there were the German-American friendship weeks every year.

  • The history of US troops in Germany

    Joint Bundeswehr maneuvers

    The Federal Republic of Germany became an important strategic location during the Cold War. The NATO maneuver Reforger I (Return of Forces to Germany) in Vilseck/Grafenwöhr in 1969 was one of many joint war games held by the US Army and the Bundeswehr. The enemy was the Soviet Union and the other signatories of the Warsaw Pact, including the German Democratic Republic, or East Germany.

  • The history of US troops in Germany

    Dispute over nuclear missiles

    Heavily guarded Pershing-II rockets were brought to the US base in Mutlangen in 1983. The rockets, armed with nuclear warheads, became a political issue. They were touted as filling an important gap in NATO’s deterrent shield against the Warsaw Pact. Peace activists, however, saw them as a threat and held massive demonstrations. Many celebrities joined in the protests.

  • The history of US troops in Germany

    Separate ways on Iraq

    Some 20 years later, US President George W. Bush went to war with Iraq over its alleged program to develop weapons of mass destruction. German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, knowing the majority of voters supported him, ruled out Germany’s involvement. That led to deep divisions between Washington and Berlin.

  • The history of US troops in Germany

    Germany stays relevant

    Even if President Trump goes ahead with his threat to withdraw 12,000 American soldiers, Germany would remain strategically important for the US. The Ramstein base is especially significant, since it is also headquarters of the United States Air Forces in Europe. It’s from here that controversial drone missions are flown against targets in Africa and Asia.

    Author: Christoph Hasselbach


Measles outbreak throws evacuation plans into disarray

Ralf Lessmeister deals with them practically every day; he has been the district administrator of Kaiserslautern since 2017 and, like Hechler, is one of the first points of contact for the US military. He talks to the air base’s liaison office on the phone every day, and he’s happy to answer the phone on weekends too. Lessmeister was called upon when five Afghan refugees who had landed in the US were found to be infected with measles.

“For the first 100 doses of vaccine, we raided our large pharmacy here at the hospital and brought it to Ramstein within two hours,” he says. Because all 9,000 refugees currently still at the military base need to be vaccinated on a fast-track basis, evacuation flights have been suspended for now.

By September 30, Lessmeister says, the US still wants all refugees flown out, which seems optimistic, to say the least. “The clock is ticking,” he says. It was originally agreed with Germany that those in need of protection would spend no more than ten days at the military base, but the measles outbreak threw a wrench in that plan. 

Ralf Lessmeister says he’s used to be in the international focus

First refugees wait for their asylum decision in Germany

The district administrator and his team also had to attend to medical emergencies; 20 seriously injured people, victims of the Kabul terrorist attacks, were transported to surrounding hospitals and to the neighboring state of Saarland. Lessmeister also keeps an eye on the refugees who have applied for asylum in Germany in Ramstein and are now waiting for their decision at reception facilities in the towns of Kusel, Trier, or Bitburg.

The central administrative authority of the federal state of Rhineland-Palatinate, where Ramstein is located, told DW in a statement, “A total of 463 people from the evacuation flights have been taken in so far in Rhineland-Palatinate, including around 210 people who had been handed over by US forces to the federal police.”

German courts misjudged situation in Afghanistan

Regensburg-based Philipp Pruy is a specialist lawyer for migration law currently representing more than 100 Afghans, people who have just arrived from Afghanistan, or people whose asylum application has already been rejected once and who are now making a follow-up application.

“In past years, the chances of success for these asylum applications were pretty mixed, even though people claimed persecution by the Taliban even then,” says Pruy, “Until then, the courts argued that they had an alternative escape route in the country itself, i.e. to Herat, Mazar-i-Sharif or Kabul.”

The lawyer says German courts ignored how the situation in Afghanistan was deteriorating until the very end. The case of 23-year-old Said made headlines because he was one of the last Afghans to be deported to Kabul at the beginning of July after Pruy had exhausted all legal means.

“The chances for Afghan refugees to get asylum have improved considerably since the Taliban took power,” says Pruy. “If they are deported, the people face inhumane, degrading treatment.”

The remaining 9,000 refugees at Ramstein are mostly Afghans who have been local staff supporting the United States. But Pruy is convinced that they would also have a good chance of being granted asylum in Germany. The military base is on German territory, so the refugees would be entering European soil and the Dublin Regulation would apply.

“All you have to do is approach the federal police officers on the grounds of the military base and utter the word asylum, and the federal police would then have to pass the asylum application on to the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees,” the lawyer says. “And people will probably think about applying for asylum in Ramstein before going to Albania or another third country.”

*Zarah is a pseudonym. DW is withholding her real name for security reasons.

This article was translated from German.

While you’re here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society, with an eye toward understanding this year’s elections and beyond. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing, to stay on top of developments as Germany enters the post-Merkel era.

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/fleeing-afghanistan-from-kabul-to-ramstein-in-germany-but-what-then/a-59213475?maca=en-rss-en-ger-1023-xml-atom

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