US dismisses criticism over response to Myanmar quake

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has rejected claims that Washington's limited response to the recent earthquake in Myanmar was due to the Trump administrationās decision to close its humanitarian aid agency.
When questioned by the BBC about why the U.S. had not provided significant assistanceāas it has often done during previous crisesāRubio responded by saying, āWeāre not the worldās government.ā
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has pushed back against criticism that Washington was unprepared to assist following the Myanmar earthquake because of the Trump administration's decision to shut down a key humanitarian aid agency.
During an interview with the BBC, Rubio was asked why the United States had not responded in a significant way, as it has traditionally done during similar international disasters.
He replied, āWe are not the worldās government.ā
He elaborated further: āWeāre no longer going to pour $10 millionāor $100 millionāinto operations that only manage to get $10 million worth of help to those in need. That model doesnāt make sense anymore. We've stopped operating like that.ā
Rubio emphasized that the U.S. would no longer fund large global NGOs that, in his words, have built their operations around profiting from aid distribution.
āThatās not something weāre supporting now,ā he said.
āWeāre willing to work with governments and effective, trustworthy NGOs already working on the ground. Weāll be involved and helpful. But there are many other wealthy nations out thereāitās time for them to contribute as well. Weāll do our part.ā
When the earthquake hit Myanmar, reports surfaced that the White House had initially tried to deploy a Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART).
However, former officials revealed that the effort failed due to previous cuts: the Trump administration had eliminated key logistics contracts and dismissed personnel responsible for coordinating such missions.
These cuts to USAID were reportedly driven by Elon Muskās Department of Government Efficiencyāalso known as Dogeāwhich was created after President Trump, on his first day in office, labeled much of foreign aid as an āindustryā that he believed often conflicted with American values.