U.S. Ambassador Ann Marie Yastishock visits Solomon Islands amid U.S. foreign aid suspensions affecting key projects.
U.S. Ambassador Ann Marie Yastishock has recently visited the Solomon Islands, meeting with national and provincial leaders while touring key historical and development sites.
During her visit, Yastishock met separately with Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele and Foreign Minister Peter Agovaka Shanel in Honiara. She then traveled to Tulagi, where she paid a courtesy call on Central Province Premier Michael Salini.
The Ambassador also visited Blue Beach, the site where U.S. Marines landed during World War II, and the location of a future colonial history museum. She later met with students and teachers at McMahon Community High School before heading to Roderick Bay to learn about the village’s tourism industry.
Yastishock toured a U.S. Defense and POW/MIA Accounting Agency excavation site searching for the remains of Marines from the Battle of Guadalcanal. She also visited a HALO Trust project at Bloody Ridge, where the U.S. government funds efforts to map unexploded ordnance in the Solomon Islands.
Her visit comes as the U.S. reassesses its foreign aid commitments. Following his return to office, President Donald Trump signed an executive order suspending U.S. development aid for 90 days. Several U.S.-funded projects in the Solomon Islands have been put on hold, while some, including media development projects under Internews, have been formally terminated.
Other initiatives in healthcare, education, and economic development remain in limbo. The U.S. Embassy issued only a brief statement on the visit, providing no further details on US Funded programs in the country.





