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TRUMP ADMINISTRATION MOVES TO DISMANTLE USAID, LEAVING THOUSANDS JOBLESS

In a shocking move, the Trump administration has taken a significant step towards dismantling the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), leaving thousands of employees without jobs. As of Monday, all but a fraction of USAID staffers worldwide were told they were on leave, while at least 1,600 U.S.-based staffers were notified of their termination. This drastic measure is part of President Donald Trump’s broader campaign to slash the size of the federal government, with cost-cutting ally Elon Musk by his side. The goal, according to Trump and Musk, is to gut the six-decade-old aid and development agency. The move comes after U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols rejected a lawsuit from employees seeking to block the government’s plan. On Friday, Judge Nichols allowed the administration to proceed with its plan to pull thousands of USAID staffers off the job in the United States and around the world. This development is the latest in a series of actions taken by the Trump administration to dismantle USAID. Within hours of Trump’s inauguration on January 20, 2025, he issued an executive order suspending new foreign assistance programs for 90 days. The implications of this move are far-reaching, and it remains to be seen how the dismantling of USAID will impact global aid and development efforts.

US GOVERNMENT TO INVESTIGATE FOREIGN AID UTILIZATION IN NIGERIA AND OTHER COUNTRIES

The US government has initiated an investigation into the utilization of past foreign aid allocated to Nigeria and other countries. This move follows US President Donald Trump’s decision on January 20, 2025, to suspend all foreign aid for 90 days, citing concerns about global destabilization and misalignment with American interests. The investigation is a response to growing calls for a comprehensive review of US Agency for International Development (USAID) health funds. Republican Representative Scott Perry from Pennsylvania recently alleged that USAID funds had been misused, citing a staggering $697 million annual expenditure that may have ended up funding terrorist organizations, including Boko Haram, ISIS, and Al-Qaeda. Perry “Who gets some of that money? Does that name ring a bell to anybody in the room? Because your money, your money, $697 million annually, plus the shipments of cash funds in Madrasas, ISIS, Al-Qaeda, Boko Haram, ISIS Khorasan, terrorist training camps. That’s what it’s funding,” Perry said during the inaugural hearing of the Subcommittee on Delivering on Government Efficiency. In response to these allegations, the US Mission to Nigeria confirmed that monitoring systems are in place to track past assistance provided by the US government. The mission also strongly condemned the ongoing violence and loss of life caused by Boko Haram in Nigeria. “Comprehensive monitoring and evaluation systems are in place to help verify that U.S. assistance reaches intended recipients. The United States condemns the violence and blatant disregard for human life perpetrated by Boko Haram and other terrorist groups in Nigeria and the region,” the US Mission stated. The US government has designated Boko Haram as a Foreign Terrorist Organization since November 14, 2013, and continues to work with Nigeria and regional partners to counter terrorism.

US CONGRESSMAN ALLEGES USAID FUNDED BOKO HARAM, OTHER TERRORIST GROUPS UNDER OBAMA AND BIDEN ADMINISTRATIONS

US Congressman Scott Perry has made a shocking allegation that the US Agency for International Development (USAID) funded terrorist groups, including Boko Haram, under the administrations of former US Presidents Barack Obama and Joe Biden. Perry, a Republican representing Pennsylvania, made the claim during a hearing of the Subcommittee on Delivering on Government Efficiency, which focused on alleged misappropriations of taxpayer funds. Perry alleged that USAID funded various terrorist groups, including ISIS, Al-Qaeda, and Boko Haram, to the tune of $697 million annually. He also claimed that the agency spent $136 million to build 120 schools in Pakistan, but there was “zero evidence” of the schools’ construction. Perry questioned the effectiveness of USAID’s programs, including the Women’s Scholarship Endowment and Young Women Lead, which receive millions of dollars annually. “If you think that the program… is going to women who… are supposed to benefit from it, it is not,” Perry said. “You are paying for terrorism. This has got to end.” Perry’s allegations have sparked controversy, with some calling for greater transparency and accountability in USAID’s operations. US President Donald Trump has previously called for the closure of USAID, accusing the agency of corruption. Trump’s billionaire ally, Elon Musk, has also criticized USAID, alleging that it engages in rogue operations. Musk has vowed to shut down the agency, calling it “a viper’s nest of radical-left Marxists who hate America”.

I RAN U.S.A.I.D. KILLING IT IS A WIN FOR AUTOCRATS EVERYWHERE

By Samantha Power Ms. Power was the administrator of the United States Agency for International Development in the Biden administration. We are witnessing one of the worst and most costly foreign policy blunders in U.S. history. Less than three weeks into Donald Trump’s second term, he, Elon Musk and Secretary of State Marco Rubio have halted the U.S. Agency for International Development’s aid programs around the world. In so doing, they have imperiled millions of lives, thousands of American jobs and billions of dollars of investment in American small businesses and farms while severely undermining our national security and global influence — all while authoritarians and extremists celebrate their luck. I am shocked by the gleeful assault perpetrated by our own government against U.S.A.I.D.’s programs and the public servants who work on them. But after running the agency for four years, I am not surprised that the attacks are being cheered by Moscow and Beijing. They understand what those seeking to dismantle the agency are desperate to hide from the American people: U.S.A.I.D. has become America’s superpower in a world defined by threats that cross borders and amid growing strategic competition. The assistance provided by U.S.A.I.D. comes in many forms, and with a budget of less than 1 percent of the U.S. government’s overall annual spending, it, alone, is no panacea for the world’s major challenges. Like all government agencies, it could be more efficient, and making it so was an effort I spearheaded during my tenure. Yet for much of the world population, the investments and work of U.S.A.I.D. make up the primary (and often only) contact with the United States. Some investments save lives almost immediately — like the medicines dispensed to 500,000 children with H.I.V., or the nutrient-rich food manufactured in states like Rhode Island and Georgia that pulls starving children from the brink of death. Out of the $38 billion that U.S.A.I.D. spent in fiscal year 2023, nearly $20 billion was for health programs (such as those that combat malaria, tuberculosis, H.I.V./AIDS and infectious disease outbreaks) and humanitarian assistance to respond to emergencies and help stabilize war-torn regions. Other U.S.A.I.D. investments are less visible but pay dividends in the longer term, such as giving girls a chance to get an education and enter the work force, or growing local economies. Many of the agency’s most significant investments — like helping communities rebuild after ISIS has been defeated or improving poor countries’ ability to suppress deadly infectious disease outbreaks — are immensely important for national security. And yet U.S.A.I.D. is no longer monitoring bird flu in 49 countries as it was three weeks ago; it has stopped working with at-risk youth in Central America to prevent gang violence that spurs migration; it is not cleaning up fields poisoned by Agent Orange in Vietnam; it is not eradicating polio; it is not collaborating with communities in countries like Syria, Morocco and Kazakhstan to reduce vulnerability to radicalization. The costs of dismantling these programs — and thus perpetrating these harms — will be felt for generations to come. Of course, the agency I have just described bears no resemblance to the “radical left” and “criminal” phantom that Mr. Trump is slaying. In addition to extensive oversight from Congress, U.S.A.I.D. meticulously documented all of its programs and expenditures online. It is perhaps not a coincidence that one of the first acts of the men intent on killing the agency was to have the U.S.A.I.D. website go dark. In fact, U.S.A.I.D. has generated vast stores of political capital in the more than 100 countries where it works, making it more likely that when the United States makes hard requests of their leaders — for example, to send peacekeepers to a war zone, to help a U.S. company enter a new market, or to extradite a criminal to the United States — they say yes. That partly explains why the attacks on U.S.A.I.D.’s work from within the U.S. government are being welcomed by autocrats. During my tenure as U.S.A.I.D. administrator, we saw a significant uptick in attacks by China and Russia on the agency. Last April, the Chinese government issued an over 20-page attack on U.S.A.I.D.’s work, offering up a litany of false claims about how the United States had “acted recklessly, committed numerous misdeeds and committed numerous crimes.” In the last six months of the Biden administration, we documented more than 80 foreign propaganda campaigns targeting U.S.A.I.D.’s work in local languages in every region of the world. After U.S.A.I.D. expanded its partnerships in the Pacific Islands in 2023, Chinese and Russian state-backed media spread disinformation before the 2024 general election in the Solomon Islands. The false claims suggested that U.S.A.I.D. planned to incite riots and orchestrate an electoral coup. Russian intelligence used a new media outlet called African Initiative to smear U.S. health programs in Africa, including those that have helped turn the tide against diseases like H.I.V. and malaria, claiming the programs were covertly carrying out biological testing. U.S.A.I.D. has enjoyed tremendous bipartisan support in the six decades since it was created by President John F. Kennedy, and later authorized by Congress. During the previous Trump administration, efforts to significantly reduce its budget were rebuffed by Republicans who, as now, controlled the House and the Senate. Many of us in the Biden administration believed that senior national security officials on Mr. Trump’s team who saw how bold China had become in expanding its global investments and influence — and who learned the hard lesson from the pandemic that threats that cross borders can cause colossal harm — would recognize that U.S.A.I.D. had become the ground game in U.S. foreign policy. In the briefings and materials we provided to the incoming team, we also shared how U.S.A.I.D. had expanded its activities recently in areas that are particularly threatening to China and Russia — increasing efforts to expose corruption, supporting countries as they try to renegotiate usurious debt they have incurred to China, and developing frameworks to diversify U.S. supply chains

USAID PROJECTS UNDER FIRE: WASTEFUL SPENDING EXPOSED

A recent White House release has shed light on several questionable projects funded by USAID, sparking outrage over the agency’s handling of taxpayer dollars. The list of projects includes allocations for various initiatives worldwide, such as $7.9 million to teach Sri Lankan journalists about avoiding “binary-gendered language” and $20 million for a new Sesame Street show in Iraq. Other notable expenditures include $4.5 million to combat disinformation in Kazakhstan, $1.5 million for art promoting inclusion of people with disabilities, and $2 million for sex changes and LGBT activism in Guatemala. Additionally, $6 million was allocated to transform digital spaces to reflect feminist democratic principles, and $2.1 million to help the BBC value diversity in Libyan society. However, some of the most alarming allocations involve funding terror groups. For instance, $10 million worth of USAID-funded meals went to an al Qaeda-linked terror group. Furthermore, $25 million was granted to Deloitte to promote green transportation in Georgia, and $5 million to EcoHealth Alliance, an NGO funding bat virus research at the Wuhan lab. Critics argue that these expenditures demonstrate a lack of accountability within USAID. For decades, the agency’s bureaucrats seemed to operate with impunity, but the current administration claims to be putting an end to the waste, fraud, and abuse. As one statement puts it, “For decades, USAID bureaucrats believed they were accountable to no one — but that era is over. President Trump is stopping the waste, fraud, and abuse.”

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION FACES BACKLASH OVER USAID SHUTDOWN

The Trump administration’s move to shut down the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has sparked a strong rebuke from Democrats, who have vowed to take the matter to court. The agency, which provides crucial aid overseas to fund education and fight starvation and disease, was instructed to close its Washington headquarters on Monday, with staffers barred from entering the building. The sudden move came after billionaire Elon Musk announced that President Donald Trump had agreed to shut down the agency. Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has been instrumental in the Trump administration’s efforts to streamline government operations. However, Democrats have slammed the move as illegal and vowed to fight it in court. The shutdown of USAID has already resulted in thousands of employees being laid off and programs being shut down. The agency’s closure has also raised concerns about the impact on global aid efforts. The move has been seen as a testament to Musk’s extraordinary power in the Trump administration. As the controversy continues to unfold, lawmakers have been blocked from entering the USAID headquarters, with officers stationed at the lobby. The agency’s closure has sparked widespread outrage, with many criticizing the Trump administration’s handling of the situation.

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION PLACES TOP USAID SECURITY OFFICIALS ON LEAVE AFTER REFUSING ACCESS TO ELON MUSK’S INSPECTION TEAM

The Trump administration has taken action against two top security chiefs at the US Agency for International Development (USAID) after they denied access to classified material to Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) team. The two officials, John Vorhees and deputy Brian McGill, were placed on leave after refusing to turn over the classified information, citing the team’s lack of high-enough security clearance. According to a former US official, DOGE eventually gained access to the classified information, which includes intelligence reports, on Saturday. However, the move has raised concerns about the Trump administration’s escalating crackdown on the federal government and its agencies. In response to the news, Elon Musk took to X to express his disdain for USAID, calling it a “criminal organization” and stating that “it’s time for it to die.” The White House has yet to comment on the matter. This incident comes on the heels of a similar operation by DOGE at the Treasury Department, where they gained access to sensitive information, including the Social Security and Medicare customer payment systems. The Trump administration has been working closely with Musk’s DOGE team to identify areas for cost-cutting and streamlining government operations. USAID has been a target of the Trump administration’s efforts to reduce foreign assistance, with an unprecedented freeze imposed on the agency’s humanitarian, development, and security programs worldwide. This has resulted in thousands of layoffs by aid organizations and a significant reduction in the agency’s leadership and staff in Washington.