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HomeWorldTrump clears $397 million for Pakistan’s F-16 fighter fleet

Trump clears $397 million for Pakistan’s F-16 fighter fleet

In 2018, Donald Trump banned security assistance to Islamabad following frustrations over counter-terrorism cooperation. The Biden administration lifted the ban in 2022.

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New Delhi: In a significant step, US President Donald Trump has released $397 million to Pakistan to sustain the F-16 fighter jet fleet for counter-terrorism operations, despite ordering a 90-day foreign aid freeze soon after taking office.

Incidentally, it was Trump who had, in his earlier tenure, stopped the security aid to Pakistan which was reversed by the Biden administration.

Shortly after taking office on 20 January this year, Trump ordered a 90-day halt to foreign aid programmes. However, until 13 February, the Trump administration had released roughly $5.3 billion in funds for security-related programmes, according to a report by Reuters.

Of the $5.3 billion that has been released, roughly $397 million to Pakistan has been approved by the administration under 243 exceptions to the aid freeze. The money will be spent through a US-backed programme, which monitors the use of Pakistan’s F-16 fighter aircraft for counter-terrorism purposes and not against India, according to Reuters.

In September 2022, the US administration under previous President Joe Biden approved a $450 million package to sustain Pakistan’s F-16 fleet for counter-terrorism operations. At the time, the US administration made it clear that the money was not for additional weapons, munitions, or technologies, but rather to maintain the ageing aircraft fleet.

Biden’s approval of the $450 million funding followed a ban on security assistance to Islamabad implemented by Trump during his first tenure in 2018. The fact that the Trump administration gave an exemption to the programme sometime in the last month provides some clarity on its foreign aid priorities—counter-terrorism and preventing the flow of narcotics into the US.

Roughly $4.1 billion of the foreign aid exempted from Trump’s executive order belongs to programmes under the State Department’s Bureau of Political-Military Affairs, according to the Reuters report. This specific bureau within the State Department oversees arms sales and military assistance.

In comparison, America’s humanitarian projects have received far fewer waivers under the Trump administration, with the US Agency for International Development (USAID) receiving only roughly $100 million in exemptions from the executive order signed last month. The Trump administration has targeted USAID, the government’s development funding arm. Earlier Sunday, Trump ordered the firing of roughly 1,600 USAID staffers. The roughly $100 million in exemptions for humanitarian projects under USAID is a fraction of its approximately $40 billion budget.

Israel and Egypt received exemptions from the Trump executive order freezing foreign aid programmes. The US was the largest aid donor last year, disbursing roughly $72 billion in assistance, according to Reuters.

The Trump executive order has faced legal challenges, with a US judge ordering the administration to restore foreign aid programmes and awards that were in place before the presidential inauguration. However, it is unclear whether any new exemptions have been granted since 13 February, according to Reuters.


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Biden administration saw Pakistan as counter-terrorism partner

The US State Department’s Integrated Country Strategy, published in March 2022 under the Biden administration, viewed Islamabad as a key American partner in counter-terrorism operations in the region.

“The departure of NATO and partner forces from Afghanistan and the collapse of that country’s elected government in 2021 amplified Pakistan’s role in regional security and counter-terrorism efforts,” said the US State Department’s strategy note on Pakistan.

The US under Biden saw it as crucial to strengthen Pakistan’s civilian government, military, and civil society as a means to combat violent extremism, as well as to reinforce Islamabad’s counter-terrorism operations.

As part of its strategy, the Biden administration ordered $450 million in aid for maintaining Pakistan’s F-16 fleet for counter-terrorism operations. At the time, the Biden administration stated that the aid would not alter the military balance in South Asia.

(Edited by Radifah Kabir)


Also Read: Embassy reaches out to illegal Indian migrants deported to Panama as Trump steps up crackdown


 

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