The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

U.S. reviewing aid that goes to caravan nations

- Edward Wong

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has yet to follow through on a threat to cut off hundreds of mil- lions of dollars in annual aid to three Central American nations from which migrants and refugees are moving toward the U.S. border with Mexico, according to the head of the main U.S. foreign aid agency.

“I’m not aware of firm decisions being made,” Mark Green, administra­tor of the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, said Friday. “I know it’s under review.”

The aid agency, known as USAID, has supplied data to White House officials that lay out programs and amounts of aid given to those three countries, as is typical.

“It’s true that the White House is taking a close look at all assistance that is provided to these three coun- tries,” said Green, a former ambassador and Republican congressma­n from Wiscon- sin. “Quite frankly, that’s not unusual. We’re constantly examining and re-examining our assistance programs.”

Green pointed to a separate refugee movement, in Venezuela, as a crisis of historic proportion­s that his agency was trying to help address.

As the economy in Vene- zuela has collapsed and inflation has risen sharply under President Nicolás Maduro, 2 million to 3 million peo- ple have fled the country in recent years.

“The consequenc­es of this mass movement I think are serious,” Green said. “I think they’ll have consequenc­es for economies. They’ll cer- tainly have humanitari­an consequenc­es.”

The United States has announced several times this year that it will give tens of millions of dollars in aid to Venezuela’s neighbors — notably Colombia — to help the refugees. In total, more than $96 million, intended mainly for food and health aid, has been dedicated to the effort.

Some have argued the U.S. should give more.

The United States will con- tinue responding to requests for humanitari­an aid from those countries, and will evaluate needs each time, Green said.

In mid-October, a U.S. Navy hospital ship, the USNS Comfort, left Norfolk, Virginia, on a four-month deployment in Latin America to help Venezuelan refugees. On a visit to Panama and Mexico in October, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo talked about the ship’s role in providing medical aid.

Trump has made Venezuela a campaign topic, claiming that Democrats want to carry out socialist policies such as those that have wrecked the Venezue- lan economy. But in recent weeks, he has made a much bigger issue of the Central American migrants and refugees, describing a slowly approachin­g caravan as an “invasion of our country.”

The president has suggested he would cut off aid, saying on Twitter in October: “Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador were not able to do the job of stopping people from leaving their country and coming illegally to the U.S. We will now begin cutting off, or substantia­lly reducing, the massive foreign aid routinely given to them.”

Green said Trump had not spoken to him about ending or reducing the aid. He said that the topic of aid to the Central American nations had come up at meetings with other agencies, but that it was one of a range of issues under discussion.

“To be honest, there are a lot of things that are high on the agenda,” he said. “So sure, I mean, we’re asked about Central America, we’re asked about the Indo-Pacific strategy. This is a very active time for all of us who are involved in foreign policy, including developmen­t assistance.”

The United States has cut off aid or threatened to cut off aid to nations or to population­s as a way to try to gain leverage on policy negotiatio­ns. For example, the State Department is barring U.S. humanitari­an aid workers from entering North Korea during negotiatio­ns over Pyongyang’s nuclear program. And the White House has ended all civilian aid to Palestinia­ns this year, citing their refusal to negotiate with Americans and Israelis.

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