News

Three decades of joint efforts to address the lasting impacts of Agent Orange/dioxin and unexploded ordnance (UXO) have ...
An agreement to set up a comprehensive cooperation program aimed at providing digital skill training, supporting ...
If one were to see the streets of Vietnam as a tangled network of people whose names they took, every city would resemble a ...
Democratic Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett said in an interview Thursday that cutting the U.S. Agency for International ...
Without trust, it would be difficult to have the substantive relationship the two countries have today, and trust has been ...
Deputy Prime Minister Tran Hong Ha held a meeting with US Ambassador to Vietnam Marc Knapper and a delegation from the United ...
I know this is grief. Not just for a career, but for values and the moral compass I thought we all shared — truth, service ...
Vietnam's economy grew at a faster pace in the second quarter of this year led by strong exports, in an encouraging sign just ...
Trump’s sharp cuts to humanitarian aid will ensure that the United States’ soft power crumbles, doing lasting damage to its international standing.
Of 49 countries surveyed in a recent analysis, 15 have historically relied on the the U.S. for most of the funding for their HIV/AIDS responses. That funding is largely gone now.
In countries such as India, Indonesia, Myanmar, Nepal, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, and Vietnam, USAID's support has expanded access to HIV testing, immediate antiretroviral treatment (ART), and ...
Kelly McCorkendale, an Ozarks graduate who went on to serve in the Peace Corps and USAID, worries what the loss of the agency will mean for Americans.