American taxpayer dollars would no longer be able to fund aid to Afghanistan until “wrongfully detained” U.S. citizens are released under new legislation drafted in the House.
The No Funding Without Freedom Act would also require the State Department to offer regular updates regarding unlawfully detained American citizens there.
Rep. Dan Meuser, a Pennsylvania Republican whose constituent Ryan Corbett is among those detained in the Taliban-controlled country, said the bill will cut off the billions transferred to Kabul since the “disastrous” 2021 withdrawal.
Corbett, a native of Meuser’s district, worked with “Bloom Afghanistan,” a humanitarian organization. He was detained in August 2022 and is reportedly in declining health.
AMERICAN NEARING 600 DAYS IN TALIBAN CAPTIVITY AS WIFE PLEADS FOR BIDEN ADMIN HELP
Anna Corbett and family on ‘Fox & Friends First’
Corbett has had limited familial contact and remains in a heavily sheltered environment.
A second detainee, George Glezmann of Atlanta, Georgia, was detained in 2022 during a five-day cultural trip to the country.
The father and husband remains in captivity, which has included solitary confinement, and is reportedly suffering from hemangioma — a blood vessel condition — malnutrition and hypertension.
The bill added that the secretary of state would make the ultimate determination whether an American detained in Afghanistan is in such a position wrongfully.
Meuser said the U.S. remains the largest humanitarian donor to Afghanistan, providing more than $2.6 billion since President Joe Biden withdrew the U.S. military from the country.
TALIBAN USING FINGERPRINTS, GUN RECORDS TO TRACK DOWN AFGHANS WHO ASSISTED US, INSPECTOR GENERAL FINDS
Taliban fighters celebrate the third anniversary of the withdrawal of US-led troops from Afghanistan, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2024. (AP Photo/Siddiqullah Alizai) (AP Photo/Siddiqullah Alizai)
“Last month marked three years since the Biden-Harris administration’s disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan, which allowed the Taliban to seize control of the country. And despite the Taliban’s wrongful imprisonment of Americans like Ryan Corbett and George Glezmann, this administration has continued to provide billions of dollars in humanitarian aid to the terror group,” Meuser said.
“We must leverage all options, including withholding financial aid, to secure the release of Ryan and George.”
Meuser’s bill later gained a handful of sponsors, including Reps. Bill Posey, R-Fla., Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., French Hill, R-Ark., and Greg Lopez, R-Colo.
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A display showing fallen American military members is displayed for a news conference by House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul, R-Texas, as he releases his panel’s Afghanistan Report and the findings of its three-year investigation into the deadly U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, at the Capitol in Washington, Monday, Sept. 9, 2024. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
Corbett was accused of “anti-state activities,” and there are no official charges against him, Corbett’s wife Anna told “Fox & Friends” in a January interview.
“I received a picture when the Qataris visited a second time. And he has lost so much weight. He has aged like 15 years. We received the picture, and it was so traumatic to see him.”
Rep. Claudia Tenney, R-N.Y., added at the time that the State Department has been “tremendously helpful” in working with Qatar to allow access to Ryan Corbett.
“[Anna] has only had 22 minutes’ time in this period of over 16 months to actually have communication with him. We are just asking, pleading everyone… to get him out, and back.”
Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for comment.