A World without USAID? with Andrew Natsios

Feb 26, 2025 37 min listen

The Trump administration’s attempted dismantling of USAID has ignited a debate around whether humanitarian aid advances or stifles America’s national interest. Andrew Natsios, former administrator of USAID under George W. Bush, joins the Values & Interests podcast to discuss humanitarianism as a moral principle, the impact of aid programs both for U.S. citizens and millions globally, and the potential geopolitical consequences of the shuttering of the aid organization.

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KEVIN MALONEY: Welcome to Values & Interests. I’m your host, Kevin Maloney, director of communications at Carnegie Council. Today I have the privilege of speaking with Andrew Natsios, who served as administrator of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) under President George W. Bush.

Andrew’s career has been defined by a commitment to serving others with roles across the nonprofit, government, and education spaces, including as U.S. special envoy for Sudan and vice president of the global nongovernmental organization (NGO) World Vision. He is currently a professor at Texas A&M’s Bush School of Government & Public Service and serves as director of the Scowcroft Institute of International Affairs. Andrew, thanks so much for joining us today.

Before we address the elephant in the room, which is certainly the attempted dismantling of USAID, and because we are speaking on a podcast hosted by the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs, I want to start by learning and exploring a bit about your own value system and how it has informed your decision to not only work in the humanitarian aid space but to do so within the constructs of U.S. government service.

ANDREW NATSIOS: I come from Massachusetts originally. The grandparents on both sides of my family emigrated from Greece in the 1905-1907 time period, so I am the third generation, my children are fourth, our grandchildren are I guess the fifth generation. I was baptized in the Greek Orthodox Church, but when I was five or six we moved to a small New England town where there was no Orthodox Church, and my parents sent me to the Congregational Church, which I grew up in and was in the board of deacons for a number of years, and when we moved to Washington I went to a Presbyterian Church that still accepted Calvinist theology, which was quite interesting.

Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs is an independent and nonpartisan nonprofit. The views expressed within this podcast are those of the speakers and do not necessarily reflect the position of Carnegie Council.

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