Dernière minute
FRCanicule : 61 départements en vigilance orange, les températures grimpentJP10代少女監禁、母親を再逮捕 きょうだいも新たに逮捕ESEspaña empata con Portugal en octavos del Mundial 2026BRHomem condenado por pedofilia no Brasil é deportado dos EUARUВертолет Ми-8 ВСУ разбился в Полтавской области, погибли четыре члена экипажаBRJack Johnson anuncia show único em Florianópolis em 2027BRMulher é resgatada em condição análoga à escravidão em condomínio de luxo em FortalezaBRPM Ambiental apreende papagaio, anilha adulterada e arma em fiscalizaçõesBRApreensão de ouro e químicos em Raposa Serra do SolDEMilliardenauftrag aus Kanada: TKMS soll bis zu zwölf U-Boote liefernFRCanicule : 61 départements en vigilance orange, les températures grimpentJP10代少女監禁、母親を再逮捕 きょうだいも新たに逮捕ESEspaña empata con Portugal en octavos del Mundial 2026BRHomem condenado por pedofilia no Brasil é deportado dos EUARUВертолет Ми-8 ВСУ разбился в Полтавской области, погибли четыре члена экипажаBRJack Johnson anuncia show único em Florianópolis em 2027BRMulher é resgatada em condição análoga à escravidão em condomínio de luxo em FortalezaBRPM Ambiental apreende papagaio, anilha adulterada e arma em fiscalizaçõesBRApreensão de ouro e químicos em Raposa Serra do SolDEMilliardenauftrag aus Kanada: TKMS soll bis zu zwölf U-Boote liefern
Newsgather
BackTrump Administration Announces $1.8 Billion in Additional U.N. Humanitarian Funding
Trump Administration Announces $1.8 Billion in Additional U.N. Humanitarian Funding
En développement
ABC News14.05.2026Politique1 dk okumaUnited States

Trump Administration Announces $1.8 Billion in Additional U.N. Humanitarian Funding

The new allocation follows a $2 billion pledge from December as the U.S. maintains its status as the largest humanitarian donor

L'essentiel

The Trump administration has pledged $1.8 billion in new humanitarian aid for the U.N., aiming to support victims of famine and natural disasters while continuing an 'à la carte' approach to funding international agencies.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

The Trump administration has previously reduced foreign aid, leading to significant budget cuts across various U.N. agencies.

Taille de police

The Trump administration on Thursday announced $1.8 billion in additional funding for U.N. humanitarian aid, saying the money will be earmarked for life-saving aid to victims of natural disasters, famine and “people who are truly in critical need.”

The money will be allocated over the coming year and adds to the $2 billion that the Trump administration pledged in December. Mike Waltz, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said at a press conference that the new funding is just “the latest step.”

The money is a fraction of what the U.S. has contributed in the past but reflects what President Donald Trump's administration believes is still a generous amount that will maintain America’s status as the world’s largest humanitarian donor.

The Trump administration has cut billions in U.S. foreign aid, prompting U.N. agencies to slash spending, aid projects and thousands of jobs. Other traditional U.N. donors like Britain, France, Germany and Japan also have reduced aid allocations.

U.N. humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher called his agency “overstretched, underresourced and literally under attack” and reiterated its 2026 plan to reach 87 million of the world’s most needy at a cost of $23 billion — even though 300 million people need humanitarian help.

Before Waltz’s announcement, he said, the U.N. had raised about $7.4 billion. He called the United States “the single largest national donor” to the United Nations.

Waltz slammed what he called a narrative in the media that the U.S. has walked away from helping people in need, saying it's "absolutely false.”

Under Trump, the U.S. has been taking an à la carte approach to paying dues to the United Nations, picking which operations and agencies it believes align with Trump’s agenda and avoiding those that no longer serve U.S. interests. The State Department has said “individual U.N. agencies will need to adapt, shrink, or die.”

À surveiller

Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • U.N. agencies will announce further operational restructuring to align with U.S. funding requirements.

    Probable · En quelques mois

Questions ouvertes

  • Which specific U.N. agencies will be prioritized for the new funding?
  • How will the U.N. bridge the remaining $15.6 billion gap in its 2026 humanitarian plan?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by ABC News.

Articles liés

The Lavender Panthers: A Predecessor to Queer Mutual Aid Movements
Politique·4 sa önce

The Lavender Panthers: A Predecessor to Queer Mutual Aid Movements

In 1973, gay preacher Ray Broshears founded the Lavender Panthers in San Francisco to protect the LGBTQ+ community in the Tenderloin from violence. Despite his controversial methods, the group exemplified queer mutual aid in a homophobic society and predated later movements. Broshears actively sought publicity, which helped preserve information about the group, unlike many other discreet queer defense organizations.

NPR News
Plus sur ce sujetunited nations