KEY POINTS
  • The United States is working with allies on securing several overseas locations for approximately 4,000 Afghan nationals and their families.
  • U.S. and coalition troops are withdrawing from the war-torn country.
  • At the Pentagon on Wednesday, the nation's highest military officer told reporters that the U.S. has completed more than 95% of the withdrawal from Afghanistan.
U.S. Army 1st Lt. Benjamin Riley (right) and a Provincial Reconstruction Team Zabul interpreter (center) meet a villager during a patrol to the Arghandab River, Afghanistan, on July 19, 2011.

WASHINGTON – The United States is working with allies on securing several overseas locations for approximately 4,000 Afghan nationals and their families as U.S. and coalition troops withdraw from the war-torn country.

The interagency effort, dubbed Operation Allies Refuge, comes as the State Department works through a backlog of more than 10,000 special immigrant visas for eligible Afghans who helped coalition forces. Those who have completed the majority of their visa process will be evacuated to a U.S. Army garrison in Virginia.