The Trump administration has terminated a State Department programme designed to combat the perceived weaponisation of US foreign assistance, a move that British officials have quietly endorsed as a necessary restraint on executive overreach. The fund, established in 2019, was intended to prevent the use of aid as a political tool against adversaries, but critics argued it had become a channel for partisan interests.
The decision, confirmed by a State Department spokesperson on Tuesday, comes amid a broader Republican effort to curtail discretionary spending and assert congressional oversight. The fund, which had a budget of $200 million, was placed under review by the Office of Management and Budget last month. A senior administration official said the programme had been “misused to advance political agendas” and that its termination was “a step toward greater accountability”.
British officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, expressed cautious approval. One Foreign Office source said: “We have long believed that aid should be transparent and rules-based. Any mechanism that risks politicising development assistance undermines trust in the international system.” Another official noted that the fund’s closure could reduce friction in UK-US bilateral relations. “This was often a point of tension. Its removal should make cooperation smoother.”
The fund had been a target of criticism from human rights groups, who accused it of being used to reward allies and punish rivals without clear criteria. A 2022 report by the Government Accountability Office found evidence of inconsistent application and lack of oversight. The Trump administration’s decision to axe it aligns with broader Republican efforts to reassert control over foreign aid, which has long been a source of inter-branch conflict.
Analysts view the move as a signal of shifting dynamics in Washington. “This is part of a larger pattern: a Republican Congress pushing back against executive discretion in foreign policy,” said Dr. Eleanor Shaw, a senior fellow at Chatham House. “Britain, which prides itself on its own aid transparency, would naturally welcome steps that reduce the appearance of politicisation.”
The termination has been welcomed by transparency advocates. “This programme was a loophole for political interference,” said Mark Preston of the Centre for Public Integrity. “Its removal strengthens the principle that aid should be needs-based, not loyalist.” However, some conservative figures expressed disappointment, arguing that the fund provided a necessary tool to counter Chinese influence.
For London, the development may ease negotiations over future aid commitments. The UK is currently re-evaluating its own foreign assistance priorities after a decade of cuts. A Treasury official said the government was “closely watching” US policy changes. “We need to ensure our aid remains effective and principled. The US decision reinforces our own direction,” the official added.
The axing of the fund is not expected to affect UK-US joint projects. The State Department confirmed that existing commitments would be honoured. But the row over the fund’s purpose highlights deeper divisions over the role of aid in diplomacy. As one diplomat put it: “This is a small victory for the rulebook over the instrument of state power.”









