"From January to August 2013, I served with a U.S. Navy public affairs team in East Africa at Camp Lemonnier. During those months in the Horn of Africa, I witnessed both extraordinary hardship and extraordinary resilience. I saw communities struggling through drought, poverty, displacement, and the lingering scars of conflict. I also saw something else: the stabilizing power of American humanitarian leadership.
For many Americans, foreign aid is often discussed as a budget item or political debate. In East Africa, it was something far more tangible. Food assistance, medical care, refugee support, HIV treatment, and clean water programs were often the thin line separating stability from desperation.
For decades, the United States helped sustain vulnerable populations across countries like Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, and South Sudan through the work of the United States Agency for International Development and countless humanitarian organizations operating in some of the world's most fragile environments. These programs were never simply acts of charity. They were strategic investments in regional stability, counterterrorism, and American influence.
That is why recent reports detailing the collapse of USAID operations across Africa are so alarming.
Following the shutdown of more than 90 percent of U.S. foreign aid contracts — amounting to roughly $60 USD billion in cuts — humanitarian systems in multiple African countries have been pushed toward crisis. New research has already linked the abrupt withdrawal of aid to increases in violence and instability in heavily aid-dependent regions. Some studies report spikes in protests, riots, civilian attacks, and localized conflict following the cuts…"
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Armand