US pledges $2B for UN humanitarian aid as Trump slashes funding and warns agencies to ‘adapt or die’
The $2 billion pledge will fund a consolidated UN humanitarian aid pool managed by OCHA, targeting 17 countries amid sharp U.S. foreign aid cuts, officials said.
- On Monday, the United States announced a $2 billion pledge for U.N. humanitarian aid in a preliminary deal with the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs at the U.S. diplomatic mission in Geneva, while President Donald Trump warns agencies to `adapt, shrink or die`.
- The Trump administration has cut billions in U.S. foreign aid this year, prompting plans to centralize U.N. humanitarian leadership by funneling aid through Fletcher's office, which last year launched a humanitarian reset.
- The $2 billion pledge will fund a pool targeting 17 countries, including Bangladesh, Congo, Haiti, Syria, and Ukraine, with recent U.S. funding reaching $17 billion annually.
- Critics of the cuts say Western aid reductions have driven millions toward hunger, displacement, and disease, harming U.S. soft power while impacting the International Organization for Migration, World Food Programme, and UNHCR.
- Amid dwindling Western contributions, OCHA is positioned to centralize control of humanitarian funds as Tom Fletcher and U.S. officials seek to `control the spigot`, while Britain, France, Germany and Japan reduce allocations this year and United Nations projections warn of HIV/AIDS surges and programme cuts.
60 Articles
60 Articles
US pledges $2B for UN humanitarian aid as Trump slashes funding and warns agencies to 'adapt or die'
The money is a small fraction of what the U.S. has contributed in the past but reflects what the administration believes is a generous amount that will maintain the United States’ status as the world’s largest humanitarian donor.
Washington announces a new humanitarian aid strategy with a significant reduction of funds for the United Nations
The value represents a small fraction of what the United States has contributed in the past but reflects what the Government considers to be a generous amount that will maintain the country's status as the world's largest humanitarian donor. The traditional humanitarian funding of the United Nations for programmes supported by the United Nations (UN) reached $17 billion (14.5 billion) per year, according to United Nations data. North American au…
The US-wide humanit funding for programmes supported by the United Nations reached 14.5 billion euros per year in recent years.
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