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Former Special Operations Contractor Says Afghan Pedophilia Culture Is Systemically Worse in Taliban

Julian Dorey Daily · I Saw the Taliban's 'Dancing Boys' & Have Never Been the Same | Chad Robichaux · May 11, 2026
Former Special Operations Contractor Says Afghan Pedophilia Culture Is Systemically Worse in Taliban
Julian Dorey Daily
Julian Dorey Daily
I Saw the Taliban's 'Dancing Boys' & Have Never Been the Same | Chad Robichaux
"The Taliban's worse though. They take these boys from their families at a young age to go to madrasas and be in Taliban. So they take them and now they don't have parental protection. And so they start raping them at a young age and they do that to the next generation."
Robichaux described widespread pedophilia in Afghanistan, explaining the Taliban systematically abducts boys from families for religious schools where generational rape occurs without parental protection. He contrasted this with Afghan civilian culture where pedophilia exists but isn't universal. He criticized the silence of Western activists on the issue.

About this episode

In this episode of the Julian Dorey Podcast, host Julian Dorey sits down with Chad Robichaux, former Force Reconnaissance Marine, JSOC contractor, and founder of Mighty Oaks Foundation. Robichaux recounts his eight deployments to Afghanistan between 2003 and 2007 as a private contractor supporting Tier 1 special operations units in clandestine logistics and advanced force operations. The conversation opens with a harrowing story from Robichaux's police career involving a fatal home-invasion shooting, then transitions to his deployment experiences, including revelations that US forces may have had opportunities to capture Osama bin Laden earlier but were called off. Robichaux describes the widespread pedophilia culture in Afghanistan, particularly within the Taliban's systematic abuse of boys taken from families. The most intense segment covers his 2007 kidnapping and interrogation by a foreign intelligence service in a neighboring country after an Afghan asset flipped, forcing him to flee and abandon seven figures in operational cash. The episode shifts to Robichaux's post-service struggles with PTSD, panic attacks that ended his contractor career, a failed attempt to transition to civilian work, and his 2010 suicide attempt in his closet with family photos surrounding him. His wife's intervention and a Christian elder's challenge led him to faith-based recovery, launching Mighty Oaks Foundation, which has now served over half a million veterans. The conversation concludes with Robichaux discussing his writing career, MMA achievements, and his separation from his wife of 30 years despite years of attempted reconciliation.

Key takeaways

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