The Borneo Post

America First: US plans deep cuts to diplomacy and aid

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WASHINGTON: The US State Department laid out plans Tuesday to put ‘America fi rst’ and to slash Washington’s budget for diplomacy and foreign aid by more than 30 percent.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said President Donald Trump’s dramatic plan, which will be reviewed by Congress, would make government ‘ leaner and more accountabl­e’.

If the proposed cuts are approved by US lawmakers, the State Department and USAID budget for 2018 will be US$ 37.6 billion, down from an estimated fi nal 2017 spend of US$ 54.9 billion.

“This budget request reflects the president’s ‘America First’ agenda,” Tillerson said, in a statement released in Washington while he and Trump flew to Rome from Jerusalem.

Tillerson promised that this agenda “priorities the well-being of Americans, bolsters US national security, secures our borders, and advances US economic interests.”

Neverthele­ss, confirmati­on of the planned cuts would dismay many diplomats and policy experts, who see US soft power waning at the expense of ballooning military spending.

The deepest cuts will hit foreign assistance programs and America’s contributi­ons to internatio­nal organisati­ons like the United Nations ( UN) and its global peacekeepi­ng budget.

Despite the huge topline budget cut, the plan does not foresee a major cut in the State Department’s quota of US-hired staff, which will drop only 200 to 27,950 posts worldwide.

Counterter­rorism and the battle against internatio­nal organised crime fare much better, and the budget requests US$ 5.6 billion for the fight against the Islamic State group.

American lawmakers, who have the fi nal say on the federal budget, are unlikely to approve it in full, fearing that it will damage US leadership across many key areas.

Senator Ben Cardin, the ranking opposition Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, warned that the budget was already ‘dead on arrival’ on Capitol Hill.

Republican Linsey Graham highlighte­d planned cuts to embassy security measures and warned it could lead to a repeat of the deadly 2012 attack on a US compound in Libya.

“If we implemente­d this budget, we’d have to retreat from the world and put a lot of people at risk,” said the senator, who sits on the relevant Senate Appropriat­ions Committee.

“A lot of Benghazis in the making if we actually implemente­d the State Department cuts,” he warned starkly.

But, whether or not the most draconian cuts are approved, Tillerson’s proposal does show the direction Trump plans to take US foreign policy in the months to come. — AFP

 ??  ?? Republican staff director of the Senate Budget Committee Eric Ueland prepares to hand out copies of President Trump’s Fiscal Year 2018 budget on Capitol Hill in Washington, US. — Reuters photo
Republican staff director of the Senate Budget Committee Eric Ueland prepares to hand out copies of President Trump’s Fiscal Year 2018 budget on Capitol Hill in Washington, US. — Reuters photo

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