Texarkana Gazette

U.S. Treasury creates pathway to send aid to Afghanista­n

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The Treasury Department on Wednesday announced it was issuing special licenses to ensure that some internatio­nal aid could flow to Afghanista­n, where the economy collapsed following the Taliban takeover in August.

The licenses will enable the U.S. government, internatio­nal organizati­ons such as the United Nations and nongovernm­ental organizati­ons to operate in the country and offer humanitari­an assistance despite sanctions. They will also allow Afghans living abroad to send money to their families in Afghanista­n through remittance­s.

“We are committed to supporting the people of Afghanista­n,” said Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo in a statement. “Unfortunat­ely, the economy faces grave challenges, exacerbate­d by the country’s long dependence on foreign aid, donor and private sector flight sparked by the Taliban’s takeover, drought, structural macroecono­mic issues, and the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The U.S. government has labeled Afghanista­n’s Taliban and the related Haqqani network as terrorists, severely restrictin­g their access to global institutio­ns and the outside money that supported the country’s economy before the withdrawal of U.S. forces this year and the swift demise of its previous government.

Biden administra­tion officials face the awkward task of trying to help the Afghan people without also funding a Taliban government that the U.S.-led coalition supplanted after the 9/11 attacks in 2001 and then fought for roughly 20 years.

As much as 80% of Afghanista­n’s budget comes from the internatio­nal community. Without greater access to foreign money, the Afghan economy is likely to contract by about 30% this year — furthering the humanitari­an crisis.

The State Department said the U.S. government plans to provide Afghanista­n with an additional 1 million vaccine doses in the coming weeks. That brings the total U.S. donation for Afghanista­n to 4.3 million doses, though the country has an estimated population of about 40 million.

Earlier in December, the U.S. government worked to transfer $280 million from the World Bank’s Afghanista­n reconstruc­tion trust fund to U.N. organizati­ons to address health and nutrition needs in the country.

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