U.S. Interpreters In Afghanistan Can't Speak Afghan Languages, Whistleblower Reports

Whistleblower: More Than 1 In 4 U.S. Interpreters In Afghanistan Can't Speak Afghan Languages

More than one quarter of the translators working alongside American soldiers in Afghanistan failed language proficiency exams but were sent onto the battlefield anyway, according to a former employee of the company that holds contracts worth up to $1.4 billion to supply interpreters to the U.S. Army.

"I determined that someone -- and I didn't know [who] at that time -- was changing the grades from blanks or zeros to passing grades," said Paul Funk, who used to oversee the screening of Afghan linguists for the Columbus, Ohio-based contractor, Mission Essential Personnel. "Many who failed were marked as being passed."

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