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Foreign Aid and American Priorities
Jewish Policy Center ^ | February 17, 2012 | Shoshana Bryen

Posted on 02/17/2012 7:09:40 PM PST by Ooh-Ah

It is a struggle to decide who, if anyone, has a claim to U.S. foreign aid dollars. It is, after all, money earned by American taxpayers and sent to people who didn't earn it, at least not in the traditional sense. Should it be used to encourage countries to accept American requirements -- or to reward countries that have done so? Should it be only for people who like Americans? That would be a small group. James Lindsay, senior vice president of he Council on Foreign Relations, reminds us, "Gratitude isn't the primary objective of U.S. foreign aid… Washington doles out aid primarily based on calculations about how to advance U.S. strategic interests."

If the minimal condition is that American money should advance American interests, it is worth considering money spent on the Palestinian Authority (PA) and on Egypt, as well as in support of what remains of the "Arab Spring."

Palestinians: The U.S. interest is in a negotiated "two-state solution" resulting in a secure Israel and a democratic Palestine. How are the Palestinians doing? Under the leadership of President (though his term expired in 2009) Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian Authority:

It is generally worth waiting before writing about Palestinian unity agreements and governments; they tend not to last. But it appears that the current conversation has at a minimum led to the ouster of PA Prime Minister Salam Fayyad -- the agreed upon conduit for U.S. and European funds to the Palestinian government. The Western-educated Fayyad was generally considered a fair steward of donor money and thus his departure was a key Hamas demand.

The Palestinian Authority budget -- the last one Fayyad produced -- called for $3.5 billion in spending, $1.1 billion in aid, and showed a deficit of between $750 million and $1.1 billion. That means the Palestinian economy is expected to generate only about $1.3 billion (by way of comparison Vermont, last on the list of U.S. states, generated about $26 billion) -- and the PA is spending three times what it produces. Hamas spending in Gaza is not accounted for.

The PA doesn't even need to bring a U.S. and EU designated terrorist organization into its tent to raise eyebrows over its financial management and disregard for American concerns. But the PA minus Fayyad and plus Hamas should make the U.S. proceed with caution.

Instead, the Obama administration plans to pour more than $513 million into the maw, including $200 million for "direct budgetary support" -- money not associated with specific projects that can be monitored; the Palestinians decide where it goes. For example, the U.S. does not fund the Palestine Broadcasting Company because of its anti-Semitism, but you might guess that some of those "direct budgetary support dollars" go there. An additional $113 million is allocated to the PA security services that are trained by an American general. The unity talks include a plan -- admittedly far fetched at the moment -- to integrate Hamas members into the U.S.-funded and trained PA security forces.

If the money is disbursed, the U.S. will have covered more than half of the projected Palestinian deficit.

Separately, the U.S. provides $232 million to UNRWA, which appears to have a close association with Hamas in Gaza. The EU provided approximately $387 million to the PA and approximately $395 million to UNRWA in 2011.

Egypt: Disregarding high-flying "Arab Spring" rhetoric about democracy and civic institution-building, American interests in Egypt are primarily stabilization of the economy and avoidance of widespread hunger; personal security and basic human rights for the people -- specifically including the Coptic Christian minority; non-aggression toward the neighbors; and secure management of the Suez Canal and the Sinai Peninsula.

The 2012 U.S. aid request for Egypt is $1.3 billion in military assistance and $250 million in economic aid; 2013 is the same. The president has also mentioned $1 billion in debt forgiveness. The distribution indicates that the money is primarily to have influence with the Egyptian military, which has been the source of power in Egypt since the time of Nasser and which we paid to maintain the cold peace with Israel. The money is historically about 25% of the Egyptian defense budget. Today, the Muslim Brotherhood demands the money and threatens to hold the peace treaty hostage to U.S. aid, with Americans held hostage to internal Egyptian politics.

The current situation, in which the Brotherhood controls the Parliament but the Army controls the levers of national power, produces a conundrum for the United States. If the money is disbursed, assuming a resolution to the issue of American NGO workers, will it go to the military as it traditionally does? With relations between the Brotherhood and the Army increasingly antagonistic, it is unlikely that the Parliament will permit the Army to decide how to spend it. Can the U.S. turn $1.3 billion plus $250 million over to the Brotherhood, an organization that was only recently considered by the State Department to be a terrorist organization? How would the Brotherhood spend it? Mr. Lindsay opined in his CFR essay, "The United States certainly has great interests at stake in how Egypt's political transition plays out even if it doesn't have a lot of influence over where it ends up."

We may have more than we think.

The Brotherhood's credibility is on the line. Its support, and consequently its electoral standing, among the Egyptian people has always been related to its ability to feed the poor. Egypt imports 40% of its food and 60% of its grain, which has to be paid for with hard currency, and Egypt's reserves are shrinking fast. Al Ahram reported in January that by the end of that month, there would be only enough money for three more months of food imports. The Brotherhood has to deliver.

With widespread hunger a real possibility, the Brotherhood will likely take our money even as they claim they don't want it. And to be clear, neither they nor the public wants American aid; a recent Gallup poll showed that 71% of Egyptians oppose U.S. economic aid -- they weren't asked about military aid. And Gallup may be providing only a snapshot of attitudes that will get worse. The Egyptian public's hostility toward the U.S. can only be heightened by the headlines in the Egyptian press. Al Gomhuria and Al Ahram, major dailies, led this week with the headlines, "America is behind the anarchy," and, "American funding aims to spread anarchy in Egypt."

By large margins, Egyptians said they prefer aid from Arab countries. OK then. But of the $8.2 billion promised by Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE, only about $1 billion has arrived. Egyptians would also be willing to accept aid from international institutions such as the IMF or the World Bank. (While Lindsay is right about gratitude, it wouldn't be unfair to ask whose money they think that is.)

Money from the neighbors isn't forthcoming, none of America's strategic requirements threaten either the Brotherhood or the Army, and ensuring that the money is spent on food is not difficult. So attaching a bottom line to our money, effectively calling the Egyptian government's bluff, in this case might be reasonable.

The "Arab Spring": Before leaving the region, it is also worth noting that the administration has put $800 million in the budget for the "Middle East and North Africa Incentive Fund," designed to "provide incentives for long-term economic, political, and trade reforms to countries in transitions -- and to countries prepared to make reforms proactively," according to the White House budget document. Does that include Libya, where Doctors Without Borders packed up and left after finding that they were treating victims of militia/government torture? It does include relatively moderate Tunisia and very muddled Yemen.

Other money, including up to $2 billion in regional Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) financing, and approximately $500 million in the reallocation of existing funds, is also being studied. Money for war zones is in a separate account known "Overseas Contingency Operations." This consists of $8.2 billion for the State Department and foreign aid, including $3.3 billion for Afghanistan, $1 billion for Pakistan, and $4 billion for Iraq. In each of the last three cases, the ability of the government to use the money for American-supported ends and avoid corruption is limited.

The total total is in excess of $50 billion. That by itself may not be an excessive sum; we do, after all, have interests that run broad and deep. But it is an enormous amount to be turning over to often-hostile governments that have little concern for American interests, little ability or desire to avoid corruption, and no stable, institutional accountability for the money.


[1] True, Israel does not march in lockstep with the president either. However, Israel has a democratically elected government; and the U.S. security assistance it receives is a) spent primarily in the United States and b) designed to thwart the overt threats of its neighbors – including the Palestinians. Both conditions have been considered fundamental American interests.

Related Topics: Terrorism Finance | Shoshana Bryen

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TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: arabspring; egypt; foreignaid; palestinians

1 posted on 02/17/2012 7:09:50 PM PST by Ooh-Ah
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To: Ooh-Ah
It is a struggle to decide who

Major lie, on the first sentence.

2 posted on 02/17/2012 7:17:25 PM PST by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: Ooh-Ah

Foreign aid is the best scheme ever devised to take money from the pocket of a working man in one country and to put it into the pocket of a rich man in another. Except for very specific conditions, stop all foreign aide.


3 posted on 02/17/2012 7:21:32 PM PST by Citizen Tom Paine (An old sailor sends)
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To: SJackson

PING


4 posted on 02/17/2012 7:50:52 PM PST by Ooh-Ah
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To: Ooh-Ah; TigerLikesRooster

The only countries I would be giving any foreign aid are Taiwan and Israel and some military support to South Korea.


5 posted on 02/17/2012 7:54:06 PM PST by GeronL (The Right to Life came before the Right to Pursue Happiness)
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To: Ooh-Ah
Rep.Poe US Gives Foreign Aid to OVER 150 Countries
6 posted on 02/17/2012 7:54:50 PM PST by Irenic
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To: Citizen Tom Paine

I remember reading about one foreign dictator of an impoverished country who has many palaces and his son had a big house in Kalipornia and some really swanky sports cars. I think those might have been siezed within the past month or three.

Was it Cameroon? I don’t remember.


7 posted on 02/17/2012 7:56:03 PM PST by GeronL (The Right to Life came before the Right to Pursue Happiness)
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To: Irenic

I heard that China gets foreign aid.... China??!!


8 posted on 02/17/2012 7:57:10 PM PST by GeronL (The Right to Life came before the Right to Pursue Happiness)
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To: GeronL

Crazy stupid, isn’t it.


9 posted on 02/17/2012 7:59:12 PM PST by Irenic
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To: Citizen Tom Paine

You beat me to it “Tom’’. I believe foreign aid is defined as ‘’the taking of money from poor people in rich countries and the giving of it to rich people in poor countries’’.


10 posted on 02/17/2012 8:37:06 PM PST by jmacusa (Political correctness is cultural Marxism. I'm not a Marxist.)
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To: Condor51
NEOCONS ON THE RISE ALERT Ut oh, agit-prop from the Mideastern moneymongers---means US taxpayers are being held up again. Another foreign aid scam is when they "suddenly" find religious artifacts--to dupe taxpaying, believing Christians.

Look for another couple trillion tax dollars dumped into those Mideast hellholes. Neocons are on the rise, salivating over the chance to kick social conservatives to the curb.....again

=========================================================

KEEP IN MIND By US law, one condition for Israel getting trillions (yes, trillions) in US foreign aid is that Israel must share with the US the vast amounts of intelligence information they gather in the Mideast. Unfortunately, 911 happened with nary a clue----even though 911 was plotted for years in Israel's backyard by Israel's close neighbors.

And isn't it nice that a tiny country like Israel---surrounded by enemies---has zillions of dollars to conduct these costly activities---as US citizens struggle to survive? Your tax dollars at work.

(1) The US stupidly gave Pakistan billions in the wake of 911----the country that was openly harboring Bin Laden in their midst. Despite all its advanced technology, Israel did not know Bin Laden was in their neighborhood?

(2) TURKEY received $21 billion economic/military US foreign aid....thanks to neocons. The US Dept of state ----duped by neocons----reported Dec 2011 that as part of their stupid cooperative effort to further Turkish economic and military self-reliance, the United States stupidly loaned and granted Turkey more than $7 billion in economic aid and more than $14 billion in military assistance over several years......So much for "peace"....Turkey is now getting ready to acquire nuclear weapons. Despite all its advanced technology, Israel did not know this?

(3) Neocons duped the US into pouring trillions into Afghanistan.....the most corrupt area on the globe. The Bank of Kabul is engaged in massive fraud---the bank where the US deposits billions of US tax dollars to run the war----if you are "connected" you can withdraw billions with no responsibility to pay it back. Afghan Pres Karzhai was seen loading billions of US dollars to transport out of the country. Despite all its advanced technology, Israel did not know this?

=============================================

SUMMATION US citizens are being extorted at the pump as the US leaves Iran with no promise of oil (having spent trillions, leaving rivers of young blood). Yet, according to the WSJ, conniving neocons are starting their own oil company in Iran. The cost is immense----facilitated by n/c Richard Perle's war profiteering. Your tax dollars at work.

11 posted on 02/18/2012 7:26:22 AM PST by Liz
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