Eleven out of 12 claims about the agency’s work are misleading, wrong or lack context.
As
 a reader service, we examined these line items, as they have spread 
across social media. By eliminating USAID’s website, the administration 
made harder to ascertain the details of some of these programs. But we 
determined that, as framed by the White House, only one claim — out of 
12 — was accurate. After we highlighted key errors in the statement to 
the White House, we received a statement from spokeswoman Anna Kelly: 
“This waste of taxpayer dollars underscores why the president paused 
foreign aid on day one to ensure it aligns with American interests.”
The Facts
According to surveys,
 many Americans have a misguided view of how much money the United 
States devotes to foreign aid. Polls consistently reveal that Americans 
believe that it is about 25 percent of the federal budget — and that a majority believe it should be more like 10 percent. In reality, foreign aid is less than 1 percent of the budget.
On
 top of that, other countries are more generous with foreign aid. By raw
 dollars, the United States gives more foreign aid than any other 
country. But when measured as a percentage of a country’s economy, the 
United States is far behind nations such as Britain, Norway, Sweden, 
Germany and the Netherlands. The United Nations has set a target of 
contributing 0.7 percent of gross national income in development aid; 
the United States clocks in with less than 0.2 percent, near the bottom 
of the list of major democracies, according to a 2020 report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
Much
 of the time, this aid does not actually leave U.S. shores. Then, if it 
does, it generally goes to nongovernmental organizations, not host 
governments. The exception might be direct cash transfers as a reward 
for counterterrorism operations to countries that support the United 
States, such as Turkey and Jordan, or Egypt and Israel for signing the 
Camp David Accords, according to the Congressional Research Service
 (CRS). Very little since the 1970s has been spent on direct 
construction of roads, irrigation systems, electric power facilities or 
similar projects, CRS said.
About
 two-thirds of U.S. foreign assistance funds in fiscal year 2018 were 
obligated to U.S.-based entities, CRS said. For instance, food aid must be purchased in the United States
 and by law must be shipped on U.S. carriers. With the exception of some
 aid given to Israel, all military aid must be used to purchase U.S. 
military equipment and training — meaning foreign military aid in 
reality is a jobs program in the United States.
Here’s a line-by-line examination of the White House list, in the order presented.
“$1.5 million to ‘advance diversity equity and inclusion in Serbia’s workplaces and business communities’”
This is mostly accurate. USAID provided
 $1.5 million to a group called Grupa Izadji, which focuses on creating 
opportunities for young LGBTQ people. Aleksa Savić, executive director 
of Grupa Izadji, said in an email that the goal “was to raise the 
perception among employers and the broader Serbian public that the 
economic engagement of all individuals, including LGBTQI+ persons, 
yields positive effects for the economy and creates better conditions 
for economic growth and development.” Under the terms of the three-year 
grant, USAID delivers money after certain milestones have been met. The 
organization has received $1.14 million and on Jan. 24 “submitted 
additional milestones valued at $755,000, for which we are awaiting 
payment from USAID,” he said. For many years,
 USAID has tried to improve civil society in Serbia as interest groups 
could advocate with the government on reforms. LGBTQ people faced 
discrimination, so one area of focus was ensuring acceptance of Belgrade
 Pride, an annual parade that previously was canceled after threats of 
violence. The 2024 parade was peaceful, and the government is discussing
 legislation on same-sex partnerships.
“$70,000 for production of a ‘DEI musical’ in Ireland”
This is wrong. This was a State Department grant, not USAID. In 2022, the U.S. ambassador hosted
 an event featuring Grammy-winning folk duo Francesco Turrisi and 
Rhiannon Giddens, along with other Irish and American musicians.
“$2.5 million for electric vehicles for Vietnam”
This is wrong. This was for more than electric vehicles. USAID launched a $2.5 million fund
 that provided awards up to $100,000 to organizations with promising new
 products, business models, or financing models in Danang or Ho Chi Minh
 cities. The fund was part of a larger effort
 to bring green energy to a country that is one of the world’s 
fastest-growing per capita greenhouse gas emitters. China has a head 
start on green energy, but the United States has sought to keep Vietnam 
out of China’s orbit, so the program was intended to boost the U.S. 
brand in green energy.
“$47,000 for a ‘transgender opera’ in Colombia”
This is wrong. USAID did not fund this. The White House appears to be referring to a $25,000 State Department grant to
 Universidad De Los Andes in Bogotá to stage an opera, “As One,” 
composed by Laura Kaminsky, an American. The rest of the money came from
 other sources, according to Juana Monsalve, the lead actress in the 
Colombian performances. “This is a well-known opera in the U.S., highly 
acclaimed by audiences,” Monsalve told a radio show in Spanish. “The last thing I expected was to hear those statements from the White House.”
“$32,000 for a ‘transgender comic book’ in Peru”
This is wrong. USAID did not fund this, and it was not specifically transgender. Instead, the grant says
 the State Department provided $32,000, under the guise of public 
diplomacy, to Peru’s Education Department “to cover expenses to produce a
 tailored-made comic, featured an LGBTQ+ hero to address social and 
mental health issues.”
“$2 million for sex changes and ‘LGBT activism’ in Guatemala”
This is misleading, as it suggests USAID arranged for sex changes. The three-year grant to Asociación Lambda,
 a Guatemala LGBTIQ+ organization, was to “strengthen trans-led 
organizations to deliver gender-affirming health care, advocate for 
improved quality and access to services, and provide economic 
empowerment opportunities.” The World Health Organization defines
 gender-affirming health care as “any single or combination of a number 
of social, psychological, behavioral or medical (including hormonal 
treatment or surgery) interventions designed to support and affirm an 
individual’s gender identity.” About $350,000 of the grant has been 
delivered. Officials at Asociación Lambda could not be reached, but a 
former senior USAID official who worked on LGBTIQ+ programs for the 
agency said, “I regularly went to the Hill and communicated on the 
record to note that for USAID, gender-affirming care does not include 
surgeries, hormone replacement therapies or any other medical 
interventions.”
“$6 million to fund tourism in Egypt”
This is wrong. This
 initiative was launched in the first Trump administration to “increase 
educational opportunities and strengthen the livelihoods of the people 
of North Sinai,” according to the citation provided by the White House.
 The money would “provide access to transportation for rural communities
 and economic livelihood programming for families.” There is no mention 
of funding tourism.
“Hundreds
 of thousands of dollars for a nonprofit linked to designated terrorist 
organizations — even AFTER an inspector general launched an 
investigation”
This is dubious. Allegations of links to Pakistani terror groups have never been proved and have been denied
 as “baseless and defamatory” by the organization, known as Helping Hand
 for Relief and Development. Some GOP members of Congress for years have
 claimed the group has terrorism links, and the Washington Examiner reported last year that the USAID inspector general began an investigation. The State Department, in a brochure
 on American Muslims published during the first Trump administration, 
said Helping Hand was “lauded for its ability to deliver effective aid.”
“Millions to EcoHealth Alliance — which was involved in research at the Wuhan lab”
This lacks context. Before the pandemic, up until 2019, USAID provided $1.1 million to EcoHealth Alliance,
 an environmental health nonprofit, via a subagreement on virus 
research. USAID initially awarded a grant to the University of 
California at Davis to improve monitoring of zoonotic viruses with 
pandemic potential in African and Asian countries. UC-Davis then hired 
EcoHealth, which in turn contracted with Wuhan University and the Wuhan 
Institute of Virology, to collect biological samples from roughly 1,500 
individuals in the Yunnan province with exposure to bats, other wildlife
 and domestic animals, according to the Government Accountability Office.
 The origin of the covid virus has still not been determined. In 2022, 
USAID awarded EcoHealth $4.7 million for a conservation project to 
improve farming practices in southwest Liberia — completely unrelated to
 virus research.
“Hundreds of thousands of meals that went to al-Qaeda-affiliated fighters in Syria”
This is highly misleading. As the article
 cited by the White House makes clear, investigators, including the 
USAID inspector general, discovered that the head of a nongovernmental 
organization diverted $9 million intended for Syrian civilians to 
combatant groups. He was charged in a 12-count indictment unsealed in 
November. “USAID OIG works tirelessly to ensure that U.S.-funded 
humanitarian assistance does not fall into the hands of terrorist 
organizations,” said Jason Donnelly, special agent for the inspector 
general, in a news release.
 “We will continue to work with the Department of Justice and law 
enforcement partners to hold accountable those who compromise USAID 
programs for vulnerable populations around the world.” Yet the White 
House is now blaming the agency for fraud that it exposed.
“Funding to print ‘personalized’ contraceptives birth control devices in developing countries”
This is misleading. USAID gave a grant
 to the University of Texas at Austin to develop personalized 3D-printed
 nonhormonal intrauterine devices (IUDs). The grant was part of a 
program managed by Eastern Virginia Medical School at Old Dominion 
University and USAID to improve reproductive health by researching 
low-cost, safe and noninvasive HIV prevention methods as well as 
contraceptives.
“Hundreds
 of millions of dollars to fund ‘irrigation canals, farming equipment, 
and even fertilizer used to support the unprecedented poppy cultivation 
and heroin production in Afghanistan,’ benefiting the Taliban”
This is false. USAID
 never intended to support opium poppy cultivation or the Taliban, and 
in fact the United States sought to stem it. The White House cites a 
right-wing news site’s account of a 2018 report by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) — whom President Donald Trump
 recently fired — that found that USAID efforts to fund alternative 
development projects during the George W. Bush administration (2005 to 
2008) had failed. The Taliban before 2001 had successfully banned poppy 
cultivation, but the U.S. invasion led to a power vacuum that was 
exploited by poppy growers. USAID was the lead U.S. agency for 
implementing alternative development projects, modeled after a more 
successful effort in Colombia, but the report documented how conflicts 
among agencies and with allies hampered the effort. It’s a stretch to 
now, years later, accuse USAID of helping the Taliban.