When the Trump administration issued executive orders suspending federal funding and U.S. aid, it triggered rapid panic in communities across the country and sowed confusion over whether the freezes would halt programs like Head Start’s early childhood education program, delivery of food to the elderly through Meals on Wheels, clinical trials for cancer, Alzheimer’s and other diseases, and the operation of the 988 national suicide and crisis hotline. A subsequent block to the freezing of federal funds and a vaguely worded rescission of the memo only added to the administrative chaos.
Foreign development assistance remains paused for 90 days under an executive order issued by President Donald Trump.
Whatever the rescinding of the memo means for domestic loans and grants, it did not change the fact that foreign development assistance remains paused for 90 days under an executive order issued by President Donald Trump, to resume only following a review of programs for consistency with his administration’s foreign policy.
The freezing of U.S. foreign aid, with blanket orders to pause U.S.-funded programs globally, has stopped work in most military and security assistance programs, including in Ukraine and parts of the Middle East, along with programs that train Mexican and Colombian police in anti-narcotics enforcement and programs that work to interrupt human trafficking. Programs that clear landmines and explosive war remnants in Mali and Sudan were paused. The U.S. also cut off programs that provide clean water, lifesaving medicine and shelter to vulnerable populations.
The move effectively ends American “soft power” efforts overseas, in which we have aimed to win hearts and minds with humanitarian and development assistance rather than relying solely on military strength. This effectively hands off the reins of global leadership to China, whose development assistance efforts have already ramped up as they work to win more power abroad.
The freeze on foreign aid created even more egregious and immediate security risks, most notably in the stoppage of funds to the guards for some 10,000 Islamic State fighters in Syrian prisons — a group that U.S. counterterrorism and military officials see as a “potential terrorist army in waiting” if they are released or break free. After some guards stopped showing up for work in the wake of the abrupt funding freeze, the State Department reportedly rushed to approve an exemption to the foreign aid ban.
More exemptions followed, adding to the confusion. On Tuesday night, Secretary of State Marco Rubio began to backtrack on the near-total foreign aid freeze, offering a temporary exemption for some funds to support critical medical, food and subsistence assistance. Much like we’ve seen in the case of federal funding for domestic programs, widespread confusion among international nongovernmental organizations remains, with uncertainty about who is eligible for the exemptions, how long they will last and what the review process for restoring aid will look like for each program.








