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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    In figures .. Arab countries assisted by the United States and the size of its assistance

    Rocky
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    In figures .. Arab countries assisted by the United States and the size of its assistance Empty In figures .. Arab countries assisted by the United States and the size of its assistance

    Post by Rocky Sun 24 Dec 2017, 7:19 am

    [ltr]In figures .. Arab countries assisted by the United States and the size of its assistance[/ltr]
    [ltr]Economie[/ltr]
     Since 2017-12-24 at 15:36 (Baghdad time)
    [ltr][You must be registered and logged in to see this image.][/ltr]
    [ltr]Follow up of Mawazine News[/ltr]
    [ltr]Trump's threat to halt aid to nations has been voted against by his decision on Jerusalem. Arab countries are concerned about the future of their cooperation with the US states. According to USAID records, 20 Arab countries have received support in 2016.[/ltr]
    [ltr]"There are countries that take American money and then vote against Washington on the Security Council. We will save billions of dollars from stopping our support," Trump said.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Germany's Deutsche Welle published the full list of 20 Arab League countries from Washington, according to the 2016 statistics provided by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) for the past 15 years.[/ltr]

    [ltr]1. Iraq[/ltr]
    [ltr]Iraq is at the forefront of the Arab countries receiving US aid, it received 5.28 billion, 89% of which allocated to the military field.[/ltr]
    [ltr]In detail, Iraq received 4.8 billion in security and military support, 369 million in humanitarian relief aid, 86 million in emergency food aid, and 10 million in administrative expenses.[/ltr]
    [ltr]US support for Iraq in 2001, when Saddam Hussein was still in power, did not exceed $ 181,000, and in 2006, three years after the US forces entered Iraq, it jumped to 9.7 billion, the highest rate ever among Arab countries in years Past.[/ltr]

    [ltr]2. Egypt[/ltr]
    [ltr]Egypt received 1.23 billion, 89 percent of them in the military field, and the remaining 11 percent went to the field of development.[/ltr]
    [ltr]According to the report, about 1.1 billion were earmarked for military and security support, while 37 million for humanitarian aid, 26 million for humanitarian aid, and 45 million for economic growth.[/ltr]

    [ltr]3. Jordan[/ltr]
    [ltr]Jordan received $ 1.21 billion, which was relatively in favor of development support for military support.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The most important thing Jordan received this year was $ 510 million for security and military, 213 million for the public budget, $ 188 million for humanitarian relief services, $ 82 million for education and $ 60 million for health.[/ltr]

    [ltr]4. Syria[/ltr]
    [ltr]Syria received $ 916.4 million, although Washington provided $ 94 million in security, but said: "All its support for Syria was allocated to development areas."[/ltr]
    [ltr]Humanitarian aid is estimated at 471 million, 320 million for emergency food aid, 20 million for multiple relief programs, while the share of "democratic participation and civil society" was $ 1.8 million.[/ltr]

    [ltr]5. The Palestinian Authority[/ltr]
    [ltr]The West Bank and Gaza Strip received $ 416.7 million, fully targeted for development support, despite 18 million security support. Washington said it was "dedicated to building civil peace."[/ltr]
    [ltr]$ 133 million was allocated for urgent relief needs, 86 million for social services, and 11 million for government and civil society.[/ltr]
    [ltr]US support for the West Bank and Gaza Strip has been uneven in recent years, reaching $ 1 billion in 2013, while in 2006 the lowest support was $ 85 million.[/ltr]

    [ltr]6. Lebanon[/ltr]
    [ltr]Lebanon received $ 416.5 million, 81% of it in development. Lebanon received $ 249 million in humanitarian relief, $ 75 million for security reforms, $ 12 million for drug control and $ 9.2 million for government and civil society in sectors such as democratic participation and legal development.[/ltr]

    [ltr]7. Yemen[/ltr]
    [ltr]US support for Yemen amounted to $ 305 million, mostly to humanitarian aid of $ 294 million, with low subsidies to the government and civil society, amounting to only $ 3.7 million.[/ltr]
    [ltr]US support for Yemen has been rising since 2009.[/ltr]

    [ltr]8. Somalia[/ltr]
    [ltr]Somalia has received US support of $ 274.7 million, including $ 174 million for relief and food aid and $ 43 million for security operations.[/ltr]
    [ltr]US support for Somalia remains volatile, with 2012 reaching $ 469 million.[/ltr]

    [ltr]Sudan[/ltr]
    [ltr]Sudan received about $ 137.8 million, of which $ 125 million was earmarked for relief operations and food aid.[/ltr]
    [ltr]US support for Sudan has been very low because of the sanctions imposed on it, but it began to rise from 2010, reaching 2013 levels of $ 170 million.[/ltr]

    [ltr]10. Tunisia[/ltr]
    [ltr]Tunisia received $ 117.4 million, 79 of which were for military support, and the rest for development.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Security support has been specifically allocated to 69 million, government and civil society 10 million, 25 million to the energy sector, 5.9 million to economic growth and 3.7 million to education.[/ltr]

    [ltr]Sudan[/ltr]

    [ltr]Morocco received 82 million dollars, 84 percent of them for development and 16 percent for the military field.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The biggest support by sector was education, with 24 million, government and civil society at 19 million, and security support at 15 million. Support for administrative expenditures amounted to 11 million, and 8.4 million directed to support economic growth.[/ltr]
    [ltr]It is noteworthy that 2014 was the year in which Morocco received the lowest US support, about 24 million, while in 2008, the largest amount of US support by 725 million.[/ltr]

    [ltr]12. Libya[/ltr]

    [ltr]Libya received $ 26.6 million, all earmarked for development support, but $ 13 million was earmarked for "civil peace building".[/ltr]
    [ltr]Support for humanitarian relief was 10 million, and 1.1 million were allocated for assistance in several sectors. America's aid to Libya has generally remained mediocre. The largest it was in 2011, on the eve of the fall of Qadhafi's regime of 118 million. In the Gaddafi era, Libya received little or no aid.[/ltr]


    [ltr]13. Algeria[/ltr]

    [ltr]In 2016 Algeria received $ 17.8 million, 91% of which was earmarked for development.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The highest support was for humanitarian relief needs of $ 12 million, then support for the government and civil society at $ 4 million, while security support was only 1.4 million.[/ltr]
    [ltr]In recent years, Algeria has not received much American aid. 2016 is the year in which it received the largest amount of aid, the lowest in 2005, with US support at 2.5 million.[/ltr]


    [ltr]14. Mauritania[/ltr]
    [ltr]Mauritania received $ 12.7 million from US support, 89% to development support.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Aid and food relief topped 5.8 million US aid to Mauritania reached its peak in 2013 with 51 million.[/ltr]

    [ltr]15. Bahrain[/ltr]
    [ltr]Bahrain is the Gulf state that receives the most US assistance in 2016, about 6.5 million, 91 percent of which is military.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Security and military support amounted to 5.4 million, while 806,000 were allocated for drug control and 351,000 for government and civil society.[/ltr]
    [ltr]US support for Bahrain has fallen sharply in recent years, with 2003 accounting for the largest year with $ 95 million, while 2005 remains the lowest of $ 5.1 million.[/ltr]

    [ltr]16. Oman[/ltr]
    [ltr]Oman received 5.7 million, 80% of which were for the military.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Oman received 4.6 million dollars for military and security support, 839,000 for government and civil society and 339,000 for drug control.[/ltr]
    [ltr]In 2003, it received 82 million, the highest number in recent years among all the Gulf countries, while 2001 remains the lowest year of support by 660,000.[/ltr]

    [ltr]17. UAE[/ltr]
    [ltr]The UAE received 1.1 million, 65 percent in the development field.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The largest share of the anti-narcotics field was 395,000, followed by 260,000 for legal and judicial development, 371,000 for the energy sector and 110,000 for economic growth.[/ltr]

    [ltr]18. Saudi Arabia[/ltr]
    [ltr]Saudi Arabia received about $ 733 thousand, 98% of which is earmarked for development.[/ltr]
    [ltr]In detail, the government and civil society received 410,000, the health system received 309 thousand, and the sum of 9.3 thousand was allocated for security affairs.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Like most Gulf states, Saudi Arabia has not received much US aid in recent years. In 2001, it did not receive any assistance, while 2016 is the most supportive year with 1.8 million dollars.[/ltr]

    [ltr]19. Kuwait[/ltr]
    [ltr]Kuwait has only 112,000, of which 97 are targeted for development support.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Some 58,000 went to support education and training in energy, while 51,000 went to the government and civil society, and 3,000 to drug control.[/ltr]
    [ltr]Kuwait, the least heavily subsidized Arab country in recent years, has received no support from 2001 to 2004, more than in 2011 and 2014.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The biggest support in 2007 was $ 1.3 million.[/ltr]

    [ltr]20. Qatar[/ltr]
    [ltr]Qatar is the least Arab country receiving American aid. In 2016, it received only 95,000, 65% of which was earmarked for military support, and the rest for development.[/ltr]
    [ltr]In detail, the bulk of this aid, specifically $ 62,000, was allocated to the field of drug control, while 33 thousand allocated housing policies and health systems.[/ltr]
    [ltr]He notes that US aid has fallen for Qatar, and has never received any US aid in 2013 and 2014.[/ltr]
    [ltr]The year 2009 is the most heavily subsidized year in US funding of about $ 4 million. "[/ltr]


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