The Volokh Conspiracy
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A Double Standard Between Ukrainian and Afghan Refugees?
Critics allege, with some justice, that the Biden Administration is treating the former more favorably than the latter. If so, the right solution is to increase openness to Afghans and others fleeing war and repression, not bar more Ukrainians.

In April, the Biden Administration expanded opportunities for Ukrainian refugees fleeing Russia's brutal invasion, to enter the United States. Most notably, it has offered Ukrainians a limited form of private refugee sponsorship, under which they can enter the US if sponsored by a private individual or organization. But critics, including refugee advocates and a group of Democratic senators, argue that this policy treats Ukrainian refugees better than similarly situated Afghan refugees, fleeing the brutal oppression of the Taliban, which retook the country in the wake of the US withdrawal last year:
"While the U.S. response to the Ukrainian refugee crisis has been admirable, it is unfortunate that this welcoming and accommodating model is not the standard for all humanitarian crises, wherever they occur, whether in Haiti, throughout Central America, in Africa, the Pacific, and elsewhere," the senators wrote….
The Uniting for Ukraine (U4U) program, created last month, allows Ukrainians to apply for temporary refuge, known as humanitarian parole, in the United States if they meet certain basic criteria, including that they lived in Ukraine at the time of the Russian invasion and that they have a U.S.-based sponsor to vouch for them. The Russia invasion of Ukraine began in February.
Since the U4U program launched last month, "nearly 22,000 Ukrainian nationals have been authorized to travel to the United States to apply for parole," said Angelo Fernández Hernández, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security.
While refugee advocates have applauded the program for its humanitarian breadth, it has also been criticized by several American veterans groups, refugee resettlement organizations, and Afghan advocates, who say the administration has simultaneously hindered tens of thousands of Afghans from seeking refuge the same way….
Administration officials say the comparison is unfair. The Biden administration last year brought more than 76,000 Afghan evacuees to the United States, most as humanitarian parolees, after a chaotic August withdrawal ushered in the collapse of the U.S.-backed government and the return of Taliban control.
Two thousand more Afghans have followed in the months since, and Operation Allies Welcome, as the government has called the mass resettlement effort, represents its own "separate pipeline to welcome our Afghans allies," said a senior official….
The U4U program is far from a general open door to Ukrainian refugees. It has a variety of limitations, including the need for a US sponsor, and the fact that it offers only temporary residency and employment rights.
Nonetheless, the critics have a point. Ukrainian refugees eligible for U4U do have some advantages that are not extended to similarly situated Afghans:
DHS says that since July [2021], a few weeks before the Afghan government's collapse, it has received 45,000 applications for humanitarian parole from those unable to evacuate on a U.S. military flight. Because there is no dedicated resource like Uniting for Ukraine to facilitate Afghans' applications, their requests have flooded the government's general humanitarian parole program. The associated fee is $575 per applicant — or, as critics note, more than what the World Bank estimates an average Afghan earned annually before the U.S. withdrawal.
This process also requires applicants to prove they are under direct threat, advocates say. "You basically have to show that you, as an individual human being, are being targeted somehow by the Taliban. And that's obviously a very difficult thing to establish — you know, unless the Taliban sends you a letter or something," [Adam] Bates said.
In principle, both Afghans and Ukrainians can apply for admission under the conventional refugee system. But in addition to requiring proof of being specifically targeted for persecution by the government or other forces controlling the region in question, the refugee system is almost completely dysfunctional, thanks to its near-gutting under the Trump Administration and Biden's failure (so far, at least) to fix it. The program admitted only a record-low of 11,411 refugees from all countries combined, in fiscal year 2021.
Afghans and Ukrainians, of course, are not the only ones fleeing war and severe oppression. The same can be said of Syrian refugees and many others. They too do not have access to programs like U4U.
Some may assume that the reason for these double standards is racial: most Ukrainian refugees are white, while most Afghans, Syrians, and Africans, are not. While racial and ethnic bigotry probably does play a role in similar double standards in Europe, in the US case, I think the main factors are 1) Ukrainian refugees are far more visibly in the news right now, and 2) the US is supporting Ukraine in its struggle against Russian aggression, while the Biden Administration (like Trump's before it) clearly wants to wash its hands of Afghanistan.
Still, there is a degree of unjust discrimination here, even if the motive for it isn't racial. It is even arguable that the US has an especially great obligation to Afghan refugees, because their plight is in large part a result of failures of US policy in Afghanistan. By contrast, the US government has far less moral responsibility for the situation in Ukraine.
But, as I have explained in previous writings on this topic, the right way to address any double standards is not to bar more Ukrainians, but to open our doors to others fleeing comparable war and oppression. We should end discrimination here by "leveling up," not "leveling down." Doing so would simultaneously promote justice, serve US strategic interests by "draining" human capital from our adversaries, and bolster our economy by expanding growth and scientific innovation.
Private refugee sponsorship of the sort now made available to Ukrainians can and should be applied to other groups. Immigration policy experts have long advocated that approach. President Biden even issued an executive order promoting private sponsorship, early in his administration, though the administration does not appear to have done much to implement it.
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Reasonable. I cannot recall a Ukrainian refugee attempting to blow me up.
Dammit! I was gonna say the same,
so my backup (Anesthesiology, always have a back up)
"No Viet Cong ever called me......" uhh, wrong back up,
Obama Bin Laden didn't use Ukraine as his headquarters (to attempt to blow me up) Attempt??? he blew a bunch of peoples up in 2001.
Frank
For me it was more personal than only 9/11
Wow, thanks for your service!
George W Bush killed more Americans than Osama Bin Laden. That said an Iraqi on a visa just got busted plotting an assassination of Bush—that is why Congress requires extreme vetting for Afghanis and Iraqis as part of the SVP program because Bush slaughtered hundreds of thousands of them.
"George W Bush killed more Americans than Osama Bin Laden."
Lie. He may have GOTTEN more killed (the same can be said, to an even greater degree, of Abraham Lincoln, btw) but he didn't ORDER more killed.
It was my duty, and honor, to serve.
Ironically Trump has to have some big balls to stand up to the Military Industrial Complex and surrender to the Taliban…we quickly found another boogeyman in Putin, as the Church Lady would say, how conveeeeeeenient!!!!!!!
You were one of the people who attacked the wrong country and fought to a vague draw with ragtag irregulars?
Many people would keep that to themselves.
Civilian leadership and boomer generals are to blame. Gen x can only do better than the boomers who are inexplicably still in power!?!
Blame the suits, not the boots
Thank the lawyer Commissars of PC embe#ed with our warriors. They cancelled the orders of people with 4 stars on their shoulder.
Which was the "right" country?
LaLaLaLa. Ilya may have compelling arguments. I cannot even hear them until he advocates importing 100000 Indian law profs who would love a job at $25000 a year. He also needs to advocate all his immigrants to his block.
Somin is consistently an idiot. If we are importing more Ukranians than we, in the national interest, ought, the "right" thing to do is shoot ourselves in the other foot, why?
So an Afghan refugee tried to blow you up?
And then you decided to use that to prejudge all other refugees from the same country?
I would
The question, it seems, is which is more potentially dangerous, an Afghan terrorist posing as a refugee or a Russian assassin posing as a Ukrainian refugee. I don't know that we have any information with which to assess the likelihood of either dangerous person among the relevant refugee populations, but I do suspect that the Russian/Ukrainian would likely be better prepared and more competent.
Fact: The number of imported Muslim terrorists is non-zero.
The same can't be said of fake-refugee "Russian assassins", AFAIK.
Not that I see any compelling need to import either class of refugees.
An afghan (several, actually) tried. And yes, yes I do
Several Afghan refugees tried to blow you up? There must be a link to a story like that, right?
Sarcastr0, I don't have a problem with discrimination here as neither Ukrainian nor Afghan immigrants are citizens. We use whatever criteria we like.
Professor Somin barks up the wrong tree, IMO. It is not that he is trying to argue for a libertarian viewpoint. To the contrary, he argues for quite the opposite. Disappointing.
I think it is immoral to be prejudiced against a nationality.
I don't think it's necessarily immoral to favor one nationality over another if the policy is motivated by a legitimate national interest. What makes this preference questionable is the all too plausible suspicion that it's motivated by race/ethnicity/religion. That's obviously not legitimate.
I don't want to import either population, but if Western Ukrainians are more compatible with the current population of Americans than Afghans I don't see that it's remotely "not legitimate" to take that into account.
Begs the question.
Preference is not prejudice. We have read that many times here.
How about settling Ukranian refugees in Afghanistan? Here they have new management there, probably could use some Helicopter Mechanics/Pilots, not like the Ukranian Air Farce needs them.
Why do you hate Ukrainians so?
Hate? just trying to save them from the Racism, School Shootings (School Shootings? is that a thing? don't go to School, kids are grown) and Inflation (what's the Inflation in Afghanistan? can't be any worse than here)
Professor Somin has no more made a foreign policy argument why it should be in our interests to treat Afghan refugees the same as Ukrainian refugees than he has made a coherent argument for, for example, treating Turkish treatment of Kurds the same as Russian treatment of Ukrainians (Hint: Not only don’t we treat them the same, we may be about to sell the Kurds out in a big way to get Turkey on board with NATO expansion).
These arguments are a bit like expressing shock that the Kellog-Bryant treaty isn’t being followed to the letter and that (shock, shock) war exists on the planet. They are a bit like the gentlemen-don’t-read-each-other’s-mail arguments against having intelligence agencies, or grownups-don’t-fight arguments for complete unilateral disarmament.
This millenium and this planet don’t seem the right time or place for these sorts of arguments, whatever validity they might have in a perfect world.
That is, while in a perfect world with no war perhaps people might treat all foreigners the same, no actual foreign policy in this world treats all foreigners the same.
Thats 'sell out the Kurds, AGAIN'.
We're trying to Afghanistan behind, and trying to put Ukraine ahead - stay tuned, by the way.
In Europe, the Roma people fleeing the Ukraine, even those with Hungarian dual citizenship, are being denied refugee status. Ethnic Ukrainians are getting assistance while the Roma families sleep on the floors in train stations with nowhere to go.
Here's an article: https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2022/may/25/they-wont-accept-us-roma-refugees-forced-to-camp-at-prague-train-station
Praha? righteous Bier(e), geschichte, Huren, heck, before the Vid' I'd fly to Berlin just to visit Praha.
Not seeing this as shocking. Not enthusiastic about letting in gypsies here, either.
Roma are not perceived as white and have a long association in people's minds (and pockets) as petty criminals
Not the slightest chance that Ukranian refugees are more likely to make better immigrants? None at all? C'mon.
Won't work cheap enough, are actually ed-jew-ma-cated, recognize the value of an armed populace, and being from Eastern Europe, with its, how to put it diplomatically? history of "Ethnic" conflicts (It wasn't the "Horrorocost", just an "Ethnic conflict")
Might not fit into the schizophrenic jig-saw puzzle Sleepy (I know, not Sleepy himself, his "Aides") is trying to piece together for 0-24'
Frank
It's a democratic administration; fairness has nothing to do with any decision made.
I think this is relevant here.
"I've Worked with Refugees for Decades. Europe's Afghan Crime Wave Is Mind-Boggling."
https://nationalinterest.org/feature/ive-worked-refugees-decades-europes-afghan-crime-wave-mind-21506
Of course it is. Third world people bring third world customs.
The point is, even among third world refugees, the crime rate among Afghans stands out significantly.
Prof. Somin adds another room to his house for the additional refugees he's housing. Right?
Ukrainian refugees are white. What did you expect?
Afghan refugees are also white but are not perceived as such