Tag: developing

  • USAID’s green energy programs have maximized harm to the developing world, according to former official

    USAID’s green energy programs have maximized harm to the developing world, according to former official

    USAID’s green energy programs may have done more “harm” to developing nations than anything else, according to a former official at the U.S. Agency for International Development.

    “I can’t think of anything that’s harmed the developing world more than the climate agenda,” said Max Primorac, a top USAID official under President Donald Trump’s first administration, when asked about programs that had run afoul of American interests throughout the world.   

    “The strong counter-China infrastructure that we developed over at USAID was simply dismantled by the next administration,” he told lawmakers at a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing entitled, “USAID Betrayal.”

    “[USAID] has pushed all of these countries, especially in Africa, to go green. Solar, wind, EV: who produces all of those materials? It’s China. Then, on top of it, we tell them, ‘No, you can’t develop your own fossil fuel industry because it’s, it’s anti-green.’ So, what happens? They can’t generate the revenues to create good jobs at home. They can’t generate the revenues in order to finance their own health, education and other needs.”

    ​​USAID MISSIONS OVERSEAS ORDERED TO SHUT DOWN, STAFF BEING RECALLED: REPORT

    “I can’t think of anything that’s harmed the developing world more than the climate agenda,” Max Primorac, a top USAID official under President Donald Trump’s first administration, said when asked about U.S. AID programs that had run afoul of U.S. interests throughout the world. (Getty Images)

    Primorac claimed that green energy infrastructure in developing countries “increases the price of energy.” 

    According to Primorac, 19 of the top 20 countries receiving USAID are part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, securing aid from the CCP in exchange for influence. 

    Primorac said that developing nations “want more trade, they want more investment,” but “resentment” is building in conservative countries who don’t want “woke things.”

    The Trump administration, upon assuming office, instituted a 90-day pause on all foreign aid. Trump fired USAID’s inspector general Paul Martin this week after he wrote a report claiming Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)’s efforts to dismantle USAID had prevented him from conducting oversight on unspent aid of up to $8.5 billion. Martin’s report claimed that about $500 million worth of food aid is at risk of spoiling as it sits in ports while USAID staff in other nations have been called back and placed on leave. 

    USAID has now been placed under the purview of the State Department and is in the process of whittling down its staff from 10,000 to fewer than 300. 

    USAID INSPECTOR GENERAL FIRED DAYS AFTER PUBLISHING REPORT CRITICAL OF AID PAUSE

    House Foreign Affairs Committee holds hearing on 'USAID Betrayal'

    Protesters interrupted Max Primorac to demand funds for PEPFAR, the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.  (Getty Images )

    Republican witnesses at the hearing largely agreed that foreign aid was important to fighting global disease outbreaks and securing U.S. interests throughout the world, but USAID’s reputation had been “tarnished” by “mission creep,” as former GOP Rep. Ted Yoho, Fla., said. 

    But Yoho, who said he came to Congress to slash foreign aid before realizing its importance throughout the world, and Andrew Natsios, USAID administrator under President George W. Bush, warned that a blanket freeze on aid throughout the world would be detrimental. 

    By pausing U.S. international assistance, a vacuum is created. China, Russia, or others are already moving in to fill those voids,” said Yoho. 

    “Not being effectively present can be arguably worse than pausing a program. And all you have to do is look at South and Central America and look at how much we’ve ceded to China and their influence from Russia, China and Iran. That has to be dealt with immediately. That’s a national security threat.” 

    Natsios said he was “appalled” by how the Biden administration had roped USAID into “culture wars.” 

    “It’s a failure,” he said. “All of the things I did at AID, I tried to do it in a way that would not alienate the Democratic Party when I left.” 

    GOP CHAIRMAN RESPONDS AFTER PROTESTERS ARE TOSSED FROM USAID SPENDING HEARING

    A team of workers install brackets for solar panels on the roof of a house in Cape Town, South Africa

    Primorac went on: “[USAID] has pushed all of these countries, especially in Africa, to go green. Solar, wind, EV: who produces all of those materials? It’s China.”  (Getty Images)

    But he noted that “woke” programs were a “small percentage” of the USAID budget, and the agency gives $1 billion per year to Christian NGOs. 

    Republicans claim there is a waiver process, but aid advocates have said NGOs and charities do not know how to apply for the waiver, and if they receive one, no one at USAID is operating the payment systems that dole out funds. 

    “I’ve met with these Christian groups, even though they have the waivers, the Phoenix system is not operating,” said Natsios, referring to the agency’s financial program. “Please do something about it.” 

    During the hearing, Republicans also pointed to USAID-funded NGOs that were conducting abortions, a program that sent millions of taxpayer dollars to dole out condoms in Afghanistan and Mozambique, $20 million for drag shows in Ecuador and $500,000 to promote atheism in Nepal. 

    “All of these programs gave USAID a black eye and that’s unfortunate,” said Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, a former chairman of the committee who claimed USAID “blew through” his holds on their controversial programs.

    Foreign Affairs Chairman Brian Mast agreed. “When done right, foreign aid can be one of the best tools. It can help strengthen our relationships with our allies and help countries realize America is the best for them,” he said. 

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    He promised that more aid oversight was to come. 

    “We are going to bring in individuals who were responsible for putting these horrible policies in place and reveal all the receipts, videos – all of it – for the American people to see.”

  • Trump’s AI czar flags report indicating DeepSeek’s true cost of developing its AI models

    Trump’s AI czar flags report indicating DeepSeek’s true cost of developing its AI models

    President Donald Trump’s artificial intelligence (AI) czar, David Sacks, is pointing to evidence that China’s DeepSeek AI startup spent a lot more money developing its models than has been reported.

    DeepSeek sent the U.S tech sector into turmoil on Monday after reporting that it had spent only $5.567 million to train its DeepSeek-V3 AI model, which is purportedly competitive with some AI models developed in the United States that cost billions. 

    David Sacks, CEO of Zenefits, speaks during 2016 TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco, California, September 13, 2016.  (Reuters/Beck Diefenbach / Reuters)

    “New report by leading semiconductor analyst Dylan Patel shows that DeepSeek spent over $1 billion on its compute cluster,” Sacks wrote on X on Friday. “The widely reported $6M number is highly misleading, as it excludes capex and R&D, and at best describes the cost of the final training run only.”

    THE DEEPSEEK AI CHATBOT BURST ONTO THE SCENE: ARE FEARS ABOUT IT OVERBLOWN?

    After revealing the $5.5 million figure in its report, DeepSeek had added, “Note that the aforementioned costs only include the official training of DeepSeek-V3, excluding the costs associated with prior research and ablation experiments on architecture, algorithms, or data.”

    Earlier this week, tech mogul Palmer Luckey slammed the U.S. media for widely reporting the $5 million figure from DeepSeek, accusing the press of ignoring that a significant portion of the Chinese AI company’s infrastructure costs were still unknown.

    Anduril founder Palmer Luckey

    Palmer Luckey, founder of Anduril Industries, during an interview on “The Circuit with Emily Chang” at Anduril’s headquarters in Costa Mesa, California, US, on Thursday, Dec. 14, 2023.  (Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    US REPORTEDLY INVESTIGATING WHETHER CHINA’S DEEPSEEK USED RESTRICTED AI CHIPS

    “I think the problem is they put out that number specifically to harm U.S. companies,” Luckey told FOX Business’ “That Claman Countdown.” “You had a lot of useful idiots in U.S. media kind of just mindlessly reporting that that’s the case, and neither China nor the media nor DeepSeek has any kind of incentive to correct the record as a lot of U.S. companies like Nvidia crashed to the tunes of hundreds of billions of dollars.”

    DeepSeek’s model appears able to match the capability of chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Meta’s Llama but at a fraction of the development cost. It also rose to No. 1 on the Apple App Store over the weekend and reportedly can use reduced-capability chips from Nvidia.

    Those revelations slammed the U.S. tech sector on Monday.

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    “There’s a reason they put out the news that way, and if the stock market is any indication, it’s accomplishing exactly what they hoped to,” Luckey added. “So, look: We can recognize that Chinese AI is a real competitive threat without losing our minds over it and falling for CCP [Chinese Communist Party] propaganda.”