Federal Meeting
Waste, Fraud, and Abuse in Foreign Assistance: Lessons Learned and Charting a Path Forward
March 11, 2026
The House Foreign Affairs Committee Republicans held an oversight hearing on March 11, 2026, focused on waste, fraud, and abuse in U.S. foreign assistance programs. The hearing examined systemic weaknesses in oversight mechanisms that have allowed bad actors, including contractors, NGOs, and international organizations like the United Nations, to exploit U.S. taxpayer funds. Witnesses from the USAID Office of Inspector General and the Government Accountability Office detailed challenges such as lack of transparency, insufficient vetting, inadequate staffing, and ineffective monitoring, especially in conflict zones. Specific cases discussed included a $550 million bribery scheme involving USAID contracts and the incineration of $800 million worth of emergency food aid that never reached intended beneficiaries. The hearing also addressed the impact of the 2025 closure of USAID and the transfer of foreign assistance responsibilities to the State Department, raising concerns about the State Department's capacity and cooperation with oversight bodies. Members debated the balance between eliminating waste and maintaining critical foreign aid programs, with calls for strengthened oversight, improved transparency, and enforcement of existing laws to ensure aid effectiveness and prevent diversion to adversaries or terrorist groups.
Sources
- Waste, Fraud, and Abuse in Foreign Assistance: Lessons Learned and Charting a Path Forward · House Foreign Affairs Committee Republicans · Mar 11