The British government has publicly acknowledged a catastrophic 2022 data breach that exposed the personal details of thousands of Afghans who worked with UK forces. The breach forced a secret £2 billion, or $4.1 billion, evacuation scheme to protect them from Taliban reprisals.
In early 2022, the UK Ministry of Defence accidentally published sensitive data that included names, contact details, and affiliations of more than 19,000 Afghans who had applied for UK relocation. The information later appeared on Facebook in 2023. This created an immediate risk because many named individuals were interpreters, soldiers, or officials who had aided British troops, making them targets for the Taliban after the 2021 withdrawal.
The then-Conservative government quietly launched Operation Pitting 2.0, relocating 4,500 Afghans and more than 24,000 people including family members to the UK under a court-ordered media blackout known as a super-injunction. Defence Minister John Healey apologised in Parliament, calling it a serious data incident that should never have occurred. However, the government ruled out additional evacuations, citing no evidence of systematic Taliban retaliation, a claim disputed by veterans’ groups.
The legal and financial toll has been steep. The breach sparked lawsuits and could cost taxpayers up to £7 billion, or $14.4 billion, in resettlement and damages. Officials have defended the secrecy, saying publicity would endanger lives, which led a court to impose the super-injunction in 2023. The new Labour government has since lifted the gag order after a review and called for transparency.
The scandal emerges as the anti-immigration Reform UK party surges in the polls, further straining public finances. Critics have accused officials of mishandling Afghan allies both during and after the chaotic 2021 withdrawal.