Monday, February 13, 2012

Obama proposes $800 million in aid for "Arab Spring"

Bee's Note:  
To:  Congress
If you approve this "proposed" Budget President Obama is presenting, ALL of you should be fired - Immediately!  You should not pass "Go", collect $200. and move on to Park Place!  You treat foreign aid as though you were playing a game of Monopoly.  

The insanity of approving to continue aid to countries, such as Egypt, who are arresting American citizens and placing them on trial as spies is outrageous!  Pakistan, aided and abetted Osama bin Laden for over six years; Afghanistan, being turned back over to the Taliban; Iraq, where we are downsizing our Embassy and Al-Qaeda is back in business; ... where, exactly, do you think that money will wind up?!  Are you all nuts?!  Take a look at the "leaders" taking the place of the "Arab Spring" uprisings, such as, the Muslim Brotherhood.  Libya and Syria, Iran-backed but Al-Qaeda leaders waiting in the wings for complete control.  Where's your common sense?  
BILLIONS and BILLIONS of dollars wasted on countries that burn our flag and threaten our real allies ... and this administration wants to CONTINUE aiding counties that hate us?  That if possible, would hit more buildings with planes ... and you think our aid will influence these same countries?  Trading national security secrets, aiding both militarily and financially these same countries have placed the United States in more danger than these past ten years of fighting a War on Terror.  
The proposed Budget is unacceptable!  Unforgivable!  
Please make sure we all have a list of those who voted yes or no on this budget, so that Americans will know who to vote for in November.  
_______________


Copies of President Obama's Fiscal Year 2013 budget are seen stacked on the floor of the House Budget Committee room on Capitol Hill in Washington February 13, 2012.      REUTERS/Larry Downing
Copies of President Obama's Fiscal Year 2013 budget are seen stacked on the floor of the House Budget Committee room on Capitol Hill in Washington February 13, 2012.
Credit: Reuters/Larry Downing
WASHINGTON | Mon Feb 13, 2012 12:39pm EST

(Reuters) - The White House announced plans on Monday to help "Arab Spring" countries swept by revolutions with more than $800 million in economic aid, while maintaining U.S. military aid to Egypt.

In his annual budget message to Congress, President Barack Obama asked that military aid to Egypt be kept at the level of recent years -- $1.3 billion -- despite a crisis triggered by an Egyptian probe targeting American democracy activists.

The proposals are part of Obama's budget request for fiscal year 2013, which begins October 1. His requests need the approval of Congress, where some lawmakers want to cut overseas spending to address U.S. budget shortfalls and are particularly angry at Egypt.

Obama proposed $51.6 billion in funding for the U.S. State Department and foreign aid overall, when $8.2 billion in assistance to war zones is included. The "core budget" for the category would increase by 1.6 percent, officials said.

Most of the economic aid for the Arab Spring countries -- $770 million -- would go to establish a new "Middle East and North Africa Incentive Fund," the president said in his budget plan.

Analysts said it was difficult to tell how much of the proposal was actually new money.

"As presented it's very difficult to determine if the Arab spring fund is new wine in new bottles or old wine in new bottles," said John Norris, a former U.S. foreign aid worker now at the Center for American Progress.

The Middle East and North Africa Incentive fund "will provide incentives for long-term economic, political, and trade reforms to countries in transition -- and to countries prepared to make reforms proactively," the White House budget document said.

The proposal said this approach "expands our bilateral economic support in countries such asTunisia and Yemen, where transitions are already underway."

It would also build on other programs for the area, including up to $2 billion in regional Overseas Private Investment Corporation financing, up to $1 billion in debt swaps for Egypt, and approximately $500 million in existing funds re-allocated to respond to the region last year, the budget document said.

It did not say how the Middle East and North Africa Incentive Fund would be divided between countries, or give any other details of the plan.

Egypt has long been among the top recipients of U.S. aid, getting about $1.6 billion annually, mostly in military assistance. In fiscal 2012, $250 million of aid approved for Egypt was economic; $1.3 billion was military and there was a $60 million "enterprise fund" approved by Congress.

No U.S. assistance is moving to Egypt at the moment, U.S. lawmakers and their aides said last week. Some legislators favor cutting off aid to Egypt entirely if it does not drop accusations against American democracy activists and lift a travel ban on them.

Obama continued the practice of putting proposed foreign assistance for war zones in a separate account. This account, known as the "Overseas Contingency Operations," includes $8.2 billion for the State Department and foreign aid.

It includes $3.3 billion for Afghanistan, $1 billion for Pakistan, and $4 billion for Iraq, where U.S. troops have left the country but the State Department has picked up some of their functions such as police training.

(Editing by Christopher Wilson)