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WASHINGTON, March 3 (Xinhuanet) -- The US House of
Representatives on Thursday proposed trimming foreign aid and increasing defense
spending, mainly for military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.
The plan will add 1.8 billion dollars to President George W. Bush's request for 81 billion dollars including 75
billion dollars for the military in Afghanistan and Iraq. The House
Appropriations Committee officials said the money is needed to help US forces on
the battlefield.
The plan will slim down the money Bush requested for
foreign aid and civilian reconstruction in war-torn areas.
"We have reduced roughly half of the net foreign
assistance funds in the request either because they were not well-defined or
should be considered through the regular budget process," said the committee in
a statement.
The plan chops funds for reconstruction in
Afghanistan, by reducing 570 million dollars for Afghan reconstruction projects
including the reconstruction of Kabul airport, a hydropower and gas-fired power
plant and a new law school.
The package also reduces the money Bush wanted for
counter-narcotic programs in Afghanistan.
The plan recommends slashing by 70 million dollars to
592 million dollars the requested funds for building an embassy in the Iraqi
capital of Baghdad.
The budget cuts debt relief for tsunami-hit countries
in South and Southeast Asia, and by 200 million dollars to 580 million dollars
for international peacekeeping missions, mostly for Sudan. Enditem
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