During the 2008 presidential election, Barack Obama promised to establish a $2 billion Global Education Fund to "offer an alternative to extremist schools."
We checked with the State Department, which referred us to the U.S. Agency for International Development. U.S. AID did not return our inquiry. However, we did a search of various online databases and found no evidence of such a program.
We looked in the congressional budget documents for U.S. AID for both fiscal year 2009, the last fiscal year that was largely assembled under President George W. Bush, and fiscal year 2013.
In fiscal 2009, U.S. AID spent $264 million in the "basic education" category for the countries classified as being in the Near East and in South and Central Asia. In fiscal 2013, that number was $225 million. That's not only well short of $2 billion, it's actually a decline in nominal dollars.
We also checked with Ebrahim Moosa, a professor of religion and Islamic studies at Duke University. "I am not aware of this Global Education Fund," Moosa said. "It sounds as if it is targeted at the madrassas of south Asia. This is an area that I specialize in and I have not heard or seen any aid going to such schools or their alternatives." Moosa added that a policy of drone strikes in and near Pakistan has damaged the image of the U.S. in the region, making it less likely such a program would be accepted locally.
If evidence of a program that we missed emerges, we will change our ruling. However, we currently see no sign of it. So we rate this a Promise Broken.