Skip to main content
Latest news
Thumbnail

US Pledges $300M in Aid to Afghanistan

The Biden administration hopes to send almost $300 million in extra civilian aid to Afghanistan this year, Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced Wednesday.

“President Biden was clear that while the United States will withdraw military forces from Afghanistan, our support for the country will continue,” Blinken said in a statement.

“As part of our commitment to invest in and support the Afghan people, we are working with Congress to provide nearly $300 million in additional civilian assistance for Afghanistan in 2021 from both the Department of State and the United States Agency for International Development,” he said.

The assistance, he said, was announced at the quadrennial donors’ conference in November 2020 as potentially being available at a future date, "is being made available now to demonstrate our enduring support for the Afghan people."

“The funding will be targeted at sustaining and building on the gains of the past 20 years by improving access to essential services for Afghan citizens, promoting economic growth, fighting corruption and the narcotics trade, improving health and education service delivery, supporting women’s empowerment, enhancing conflict resolution mechanisms, and bolstering Afghan civil society and independent media,” according to statement by US Department of State.

As the United States begins withdrawing our troops, we will use our civilian and economic assistance to advance a just and durable peace for Afghanistan and a brighter future for the Afghan people, the statement said.

This comes as Biden announced that all troops will leave Afghanistan by Sept. 11, ending the longest war in US history.  

US Pledges $300M in Aid to Afghanistan

This aid would go to economic projects, anti-drug programs, health and education, women’s empowerment.

Thumbnail

The Biden administration hopes to send almost $300 million in extra civilian aid to Afghanistan this year, Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced Wednesday.

“President Biden was clear that while the United States will withdraw military forces from Afghanistan, our support for the country will continue,” Blinken said in a statement.

“As part of our commitment to invest in and support the Afghan people, we are working with Congress to provide nearly $300 million in additional civilian assistance for Afghanistan in 2021 from both the Department of State and the United States Agency for International Development,” he said.

The assistance, he said, was announced at the quadrennial donors’ conference in November 2020 as potentially being available at a future date, "is being made available now to demonstrate our enduring support for the Afghan people."

“The funding will be targeted at sustaining and building on the gains of the past 20 years by improving access to essential services for Afghan citizens, promoting economic growth, fighting corruption and the narcotics trade, improving health and education service delivery, supporting women’s empowerment, enhancing conflict resolution mechanisms, and bolstering Afghan civil society and independent media,” according to statement by US Department of State.

As the United States begins withdrawing our troops, we will use our civilian and economic assistance to advance a just and durable peace for Afghanistan and a brighter future for the Afghan people, the statement said.

This comes as Biden announced that all troops will leave Afghanistan by Sept. 11, ending the longest war in US history.  

Share this post