The
 dramatic purge and counter-purge played out in emails obtained by The 
Washington Post, as Trump’s pause on aid upends humanitarian work around
 the world.
The
 official was then promptly placed on administrative leave — according 
to emails obtained by The Washington Post — in the latest convulsion 
stemming from President Donald Trump’s 90-day freeze on foreign aid, 
which has ground to a halt humanitarian aid programs around the world 
and prompted U.S. contractors to furlough hundreds of employees and 
prepare to let go many thousands more.
“DOGE
 instructed me to violate the due process of our employees by issuing 
immediate termination notices to a group of employees without due 
process,” wrote Nicholas Gottlieb, the director of employee and labor 
relations at USAID, referring to the budget-slashing commission known as
 the “Department of Government Efficiency.” “I was notified moments ago 
that I will be placed on administrative leave, effective immediately. It
 has been an honor working with you all.”
The
 episode underscores the tumult at a U.S. agency that is the world’s 
largest provider of food assistance, and the role that DOGE, led by tech
 billionaire Elon Musk, is playing in the sweeping edicts that are 
attempting to downsize and overhaul swaths of the federal government.
Trump’s foreign aid directive,
 signed on his first day in office, and a “stop-work” order approved by 
Secretary of State Marco Rubio last Friday have prompted widespread 
confusion in the aid community. Some aid contractors have had to go 
without pay for work they already completed, said two senior aid workers
 who, like some others interviewed, spoke on the condition of anonymity 
for fear of punitive action.
Trump
 has long criticized foreign aid, complaining that it too often goes to 
countries that do not show respect to the United States. His spokeswoman
 at the State Department, Tammy Bruce, has defended the aid pause, 
saying the United States will no longer “blindly dole out money with no 
return for the American people.”
The department has issued exemptions for aid
 related to Israel, Egypt, food assistance and “lifesaving” care, but 
aid groups say the exemption process doesn’t work and they can’t get 
assurances that the U.S. government will continue to fund programs that 
appear to be eligible under the carveout.
On
 Thursday, Trump’s directive resulted in the shutdown of one of the 
world’s most trusted warning systems for detecting the outbreak of 
famine, FEWS Net, which received $60 million from USAID last year, said 
two U.S. officials familiar with the matter.
The initiative, started by USAID in 1985, tracks hunger across dozens of food-insecure areas including the Gaza Strip,
 Sudan, Yemen, Haiti, Ethiopia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. 
That work informs USAID about where to distribute food assistance most 
effectively around the world.
“It
 is shocking that because food aid is exempt from this freeze, they have
 not exempted the program that makes it efficient, that helps them make 
decisions for where to send the food aid,” an aid worker familiar with 
the matter said.
Spokespeople for USAID and the State Department did not respond to requests for comment.
Confusion
 in the exemption process was exacerbated by the dismissal of senior 
career officials at USAID, some of whom had skills that would have been 
useful in processing the carveouts, said officials familiar with the 
matter.
More
 than 50 senior career USAID officials were put on administrative leave 
Monday, including deputy administrators and deputy assistant 
administrators.
The
 ousters, which came without warning, were followed by an explanation 
that the officials were trying to undermine the aid freeze, according to
 an agency-wide memo signed by Jason Gray, the newly installed acting 
administrator of USAID.
“We
 have identified several actions within USAID that appear to be designed
 to circumvent the President’s Executive orders and the mandate from the
 American people,” said Gray, who is also the chief information 
officer. “As a result, we have placed a number of USAID employees on 
administrative leave with full pay and benefits until further notice.”
On Thursday, Gottlieb sent an email to officials put on administrative leave saying that he had “reviewed
 the materials that served as the purported basis for your placement in 
this status” and “found no evidence that you engaged in misconduct.”
He
 informed colleagues at 2:04 p.m. that he decided to cancel their 
administrative leave status under his “authority.” Two hours later, 
Gottlieb sent a second email informing colleagues that he had been 
placed on administrative leave and bidding them farewell.
“Please be kind and considerate of my staff,” he said, “who will be very short-staffed and pressed over the coming months.”
The
 aid freeze has come under criticism from U.N. Secretary General António
 Guterres, who on Monday called for “additional exemptions to be 
considered to ensure the continued delivery of critical development and 
humanitarian activities for the most vulnerable communities around the 
world, whose lives and livelihoods depend on this support.”
“The
 United States is one of the largest aid providers and it is vital that 
we work constructively to jointly shape a strategic path forward,” said a
 statement from his office.
The
 freeze has affected a diverse array of programs, including support for 
refugee camps, HIV/AIDS prevention, democracy promotion and civil 
society in countries around the world. It also has resulted in a halt of
 programs that include even passing references to diversity, equity and inclusion.
Trump
 officials have also warned aid groups and U.S. officials against 
speaking publicly about the aid freeze, which some officials have called
 a “gag order.”
In
 an email to the 10,000 USAID employees sent last Saturday, the 
leadership warned that “all communications outside the Agency, including
 the State Department, must be approved by the Agency Front Office.”
“Failure
 to abide by this directive, or any of the directives sent out earlier 
this week and in the coming weeks, will result in disciplinary action,” 
wrote Ken Jackson, the assistant to the administrator for management and
 resources.
In
 comparing Trump’s approach during his first term, one USAID official 
said the agency had been “an afterthought and backwater, which is how we
 like it.”
“This time I feel we are target number one,” the official said.
Jeff Stein and Missy Ryan contributed to this report.