US says UN aid to Afghanistan needs evaluation


FILE PHOTO: Afghan women in burqa walk towards a safer place after their house was damaged following a deadly magnitude 6 earthquake that struck Afghanistan on Sunday, at Lulam village, in Nurgal district, Kunar province, Afghanistan, September 3, 2025. REUTERS/Sayed Hassib/File Photo/File Photo

March 9 (Reuters) - Despite ⁠what it called a humanitarian "disaster" in Afghanistan, the U.S. said on Monday international ⁠assistance to the country should be evaluated, given Taliban "intransigence" and its exclusion ‌of the female population from basic rights.

Speaking to a U.N. Security Council meeting on Afghanistan, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Mike Waltz, noted that the budget for the United Nations Assistance Mission in ​Afghanistan (UNAMA), the mandate of which is up for renewal ⁠next week, is the largest of ⁠any special U.N. mission in the world.

"In light of the Taliban's intransigence, we must ⁠carefully ‌evaluate the utility of international assistance and engagement in Afghanistan," Waltz said, even as he highlighted an ongoing "humanitarian disaster" there.

"This council must consider carefully the funds ⁠we collectively provide for this mission's budget, when the ​mission's female national staff are ‌not even able to go into the office to work," he added.

Afghanistan ⁠under the Taliban ​faces one of the world's most pressing humanitarian crises.

According to the U.N. World Food Programme, more than 17 million Afghans - or one-third of the population - are facing acute food shortages, including 4.7 ⁠million facing emergency levels of hunger.

The temporary head ​of UNAMA, Georgette Gagnon, told the meeting Afghanistan had "urgent" humanitarian needs and the humanitarian crisis there had worsened due to funding cuts. She said humanitarian agencies aimed to assist 17.5 ⁠million Afghans in 2026 through an appeal for $1.71 billion, but this was currently only 10% funded.

Gagnon said Afghanistan's nearly two-week conflict with Pakistan had had "punishing human and economic costs" and the Iran war on its other border was causing prices of basic commodities to ​rise.

She said some positive developments showed the value of ⁠international engagement, including the Taliban ban on opium poppy cultivation. She warned that if rights ​and humanitarian issues were not dealt with, Afghanistan could "once ‌again become a driver of regional and global ​instability in the form of outmigration, terrorism, narcotics and more."

(Reporting by David Brunnstrom; additional reporting by Jonathan Landay; Editing by Don Durfee and Lincoln Feast)

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