Miami Herald

Saving tigers was the last U.S. aid project in Russia. Now, that funding is in danger

- BY ASPEN PFLUGHOEFT apflughoef­t@mcclatchy.com Aspen Pflughoeft: @AspenPflug­hoeft

Emblazoned on the dusky green background of a “Save Vanishing Species” stamp is an Amur tiger cub that stares at you with pleading yellow eyes. For exactly $17, you can purchase a sheet of 20 of these stamps from the United States Postal Service.

The stamps helped fund tiger conservati­on in Russia last year — the country’s sole remaining U.S.funded aid project — but these funds have recently stopped.

The U.S. government has given aid, officially known as foreign assistance, to Russia since the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991. This funding declined over the past 15 years yet continued in marginal amounts during the 2023 fiscal year.

Now, U.S. aid funding may have reached a turning point.

So how much aid has the U.S. sent to Russia? Why did aid funding continue even as the relationsh­ip between the two countries frayed?

And what does this have to do with tigers?

CONSERVATI­ON ICON

Amur tigers, also known as Siberian tigers, are one of the largest cats in the world. They are a critically endangered subspecies found primarily in the Russian Far East but also in China and possibly North Korea.

For decades, Amur tiger population­s were decimated by deforestat­ion, trophy hunting and poaching. By the 1940s, experts estimated there were only 50 tigers left.

Conservati­onists took notice and, by the 1970s, began making concerted efforts to save the species. The fledgling effort received a boost when the U.S. and the Soviet Union signed an environmen­tal cooperatio­n treaty in 1972, paving the way for U.S. funding to support tiger conservati­on and other projects in the country.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) led the government’s Amur tiger conservati­on work. These programs included population surveys, infrastruc­ture for nature reserves, training law enforcemen­t, anti-poaching efforts, trail camera surveillan­ce and educating locals.

Amur tiger conservati­on has generally been successful. Recent estimates say there are between 265 and 486 tigers in the wild in Russia.

“In the scheme of internatio­nal grants, the amount of money we’ve contribute­d to this effort

Putin turns to a technocrat to crank up Russia’s war machine,

What to know about Russia’s offensive in northeast Ukraine, has been relatively modest,” Fred Bagley, a USFWS officer who worked on Amur tiger conservati­on, said in 2007. “But there is no doubt that we’ve had an impact. This is one of those times when you can point to something and say, ‘Yes, we’re making a real difference.’ ”

The USFWS is authorized to support the conservati­on of threatened animals — such as tigers, rhinoceros­es, elephants, apes and turtles — around the world. Projects related to these animals are collective­ly bankrolled through the Multinatio­nal Species Conservati­on Fund.

The fund is primarily financed through appropriat­ions from Congress but is also supported by the “Save Vanishing Species” stamp program.

The USFWS created the “Save Vanishing Species” stamp — with its featured Amur tiger cub — in 2011. For every $17 sheet of “Tiger Stamps” sold by USPS, a portion of the proceeds goes to the fund and, in turn, supports a variety of wildlife conservati­on projects worldwide.

By 2022, at least 60 million stamps had been sold, raising almost $7 million for the Multinatio­nal Species Conservati­on Fund. The stamps were reauthoriz­ed in 2022 for a batch of 40 million.

The proceeds from “Tiger Stamps” went into the USFWS account that was the source of U.S. aid to Russia in 2023.

However, a spokespers­on for the USFWS told McClatchy News that stamp revenue is no longer supporting this long-standing aid project. The person declined to provide further comment.

HOW MUCH IS SENT?

U.S. aid to Russia peaked in 2008 at $1.3 billion and has declined since, according to State Department data beginning in 2001.

“These assistance efforts, in the scheme of things, were not that large, especially relative to Russia’s size,” Max Bergmann, a former State Department official and expert with the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, told McClatchy News.

Last fiscal year, the U.S. funded one project in Russia: Amur tiger conservati­on. Just over $107,800 was promised for the project, but only $8,593 was sent. The funds went to the Wildlife Conservati­on Society, a nongovernm­ental organizati­on.

A second project — $1.9 million from the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t for strengthen­ing the global health supply chain in Russia — was promised but not sent. A State Department spokespers­on told McClatchy News that the government decided those funds were no longer needed.

The State Department only tracks U.S. aid funding to Russia, and a spokespers­on emphasized that the department has not itself provided any funds.

Public data for 2023 has been only partially reported, but the State Department did not identify any unreported programs when asked.

The amount of foreign assistance the U.S. sent to Russia in 2023 declined sharply from preceding years.

In 2022, U.S. aid to Russia totaled just over $3.12 million, with the bulk of the funds supporting the security of nuclear and other radioactiv­e materials. In 2021, U.S. aid to Russia totaled just over $4.42 million, with the bulk of the funds supporting the same two energy projects.

A chart shows the total amount of aid funds the U.S. sent to Russia between the 2001 and 2023 fiscal years.

The decline in U.S. aid to Russia has generally mirrored the deteriorat­ing relationsh­ip between the two countries. Aid funding continued even as the U.S. imposed stricter sanctions on Russia.

“Most people hear ‘sanctions’ and think they’re total,” Elizabeth Plantan, an expert on environmen­tal activism in Russia, said. “Sanctions are not total. They’re targeted and very specific.”

“Alongside all of those targeted sanctions, there’s also very clear guidance from the U.S. government about specific licenses or carve-outs for certain types of aid or financial transactio­ns to continue,” Plantan said. Environmen­tal programs fall into one of these exempted categories.

Simultaneo­usly, “Russia has done a lot to curtail [U.S. aid funding] over the years,” Plantan told

McClatchy News.

In 2012, the Russian government passed a “Foreign Agents” law that required nongovernm­ental organizati­ons to identify themselves as “foreign agents” if they receive foreign funding and engage in “political activities,” a loosely defined term. Another law, the “Undesirabl­e Organizati­ons” law, was passed in 2015 and targeted internatio­nal organizati­ons by making it illegal for a select list of groups to work in Russia.

“Both of those laws have gotten used in wider ways since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022,” Plantan said.

Laura Henry, an expert on environmen­tal politics in Russia, told McClatchy News that “the Russian environmen­tal movement has been hard-hit by increasing repression by the Russian government.”

A narrowed chart shows the downward trend of

U.S. aid after these two Russian laws took effect. In 2011, before either law was passed, the U.S. sent just over $601 million in aid to Russia.

By 2016, with both laws in effect, aid had plummeted to about $13.5 million.

Overall, experts consider the amount of U.S. aid sent to Russia over the past decade to be minimal.

WHY HELP RUSSIA?

In general, “the U.S. government provides foreign assistance because it is strategica­lly, economical­ly, and morally imperative for the United States and vital to U.S. national security,” according to the State Department’s website.

When the U.S. started giving aid to Russia in the 1990s, the funding “had two rationales,” Stephen Sestanovic­h, a retired ambassador to the former

Soviet Union, told McClatchy News.

Foreign assistance was intended “to advance major security interests of the U.S.,” he said, “and to make it more likely that Russia could avoid lapsing back into dictatorsh­ip.”

After Vladimir Putin came to power in the 2000s, U.S. aid funding shifted to projects the Russian government was unlikely to fund itself, such as civil society organizati­ons, and projects that both government­s could agree were valuable, such as nuclear security and environmen­tal conservati­on, Lisa Sundstrom, an expert on Russian civil society, told McClatchy News.

“There has been a gradual worsening of the relationsh­ip,” Bergmann, a former State Department official, said, “such that providing funding and support to the Russian people [and] the Russian economy was no longer in the cards.”

After Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, Bergmann said, the State Department took stock of all U.S. projects in Russia and decided whether each project was “in our interest to keep supporting.” A similar process is likely to have taken place in 2022, he said.

According to former Ambassador Sestanovic­h, “the tiny amounts of assistance that are still in the U.S. budget don’t reflect Russia’s ability to trick us.”

“This isn’t charity,” Bergmann said. “Any money that’s flowing to Russia is not because we’re doing it out of the goodness of our hearts. It’s because we’ve made a cold, hard calculatio­n that this is in our interest.”

“For tiger conservati­on, we’ve decided it’s in our national interest to support biodiversi­ty and endangered species,” Bergmann said. “We’re willing to keep doing that because we’ve decided that’s in our overall foreign policy interests and the interests of humanity.”

As Plantan described it, “nature is transbound­ary. We’re all affected by these things, no matter where they’re located within national borders.”

The USFWS expressed a similar sentiment in its mission statement, saying it works “with others to conserve, protect, and enhance fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people.”

WILL AID CONTINUE?

If you flip over the Save Vanishing Species stamp sheet, you’ll see the gray outline of a leaping tiger alongside an ape pounding its chest and an elephant raising its trunk.

“By purchasing this stamp,” a small paragraph reads, “you are contributi­ng funds that support efforts to create a future in which threatened animal species can once again thrive.”

But a spokespers­on for the USFWS told McClatchy News that funds from the Save Vanishing Species stamps are no longer going to tiger conservati­on in Russia. The department did not explain why or when these funds stopped. The Tiger Stamp program itself, however, is ongoing.

When asked if any USFWS funds are still going to Russia, the department declined further comment.

The USFWS could continue funding Amur tiger conservati­on or other conservati­on projects in Russia through the nonstamp revenue in the Multinatio­nal Species Fund or other sources, but whether it will remains unclear.

 ?? FRANK KOHN via the USFWS ?? Amur tigers, also known as Siberian tigers, are a critically endangered subspecies that live primarily in the Russian Far East.
FRANK KOHN via the USFWS Amur tigers, also known as Siberian tigers, are a critically endangered subspecies that live primarily in the Russian Far East.
 ?? ??

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