Hurricane

Trump vows assistance for Caribbean after Hurricane Melissa strikes

President Donald Trump is pledging that the United States will help the island nations of the Caribbean on a “humanitarian basis” as Hurricane Melissa continues to ravage the area.

“We’re watching it closely, and we’re prepared to move,” the president told reporters on Air Force One as he traveled to South Korea. “It’s doing tremendous damage as we speak.”

The president, who is wrapping up a four-day trip to Asia, indicated he was watching the storm during his travels. He expressed shock at the size of Melissa, which is a Category 5 storm, the highest rating given.

“I’ve never seen numbers like that. I saw a little while go — 195-mile-hour wind. I guess it can get that high but I’ve never seen it and it’s literally just knocking down everything in front of it. It’s a stage five, I guess. You don’t see fives very often,” Trump said.

Melissa hit Jamaica on Tuesday, knocking out communications and power across the island. Prime Minister Andrew Holness declared the country a disaster area. The damage and death toll remain uncertain, but there were at least 27 confirmed deaths in the region on Wednesday related to the storm.

“We are seeing extensive damage,” said Richard Thompson, acting director of the Office of Disaster Emergency Preparedness.

A damaged car by a fallen tree is seen after the passage of Hurricane Melissa in Manchester, Jamaica, on October 28, 2025. Hurricane Melissa ripped up trees and knocked out power after making landfall in Jamaica on October 28, 2025 as one of the most powerful hurricanes on record, inundating the island nation with rains that threaten flash floods and landslides. (Photo by Ricardo Makyn / AFP) (Photo by RICARDO MAKYN/AFP via Getty Images)
A damaged car by a fallen tree is seen after the passage of Hurricane Melissa in Manchester, Jamaica, on October 28, 2025. Hurricane Melissa ripped up trees and knocked out power after making landfall in Jamaica on October 28, 2025 as one of the most powerful hurricanes on record, inundating the island nation with rains that threaten flash floods and landslides. (Photo by Ricardo Makyn / AFP) (Photo by RICARDO MAKYN/AFP via Getty Images) RICARDO MAKYN AFP via Getty Images

Thompson said tourist mecca Montego Bay was underwater.

“This morning the fire brigade is out trying to see how we can rescue people,” he said, describing how people were forced to take shelter on rooftops.

The Jamaican government is in touch with Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the U.S. Embassy in Kingston.

“Support has been pledged even as we work to clarify specific needs based on our assessment of the damage caused by Hurricane Melissa,” Dana Morris Dixon, the minister of information for Jamaica, said in a statement. “We thank the US Government and the people of the US for their kind offers of support at this challenging time for the country.”

The storm’s power decreased as it made its way across the Caribbean, but it remained deadly.

It clocked in as a Category 3 storm when it struck Cuba on Wednesday morning, bringing up to 20 inches of flooding rain, high winds and up to 12 feet of storm surge. It was later downgraded to a Category 2 storm.

More damage, however, was expected.

The National Hurricane Center warned of “catastrophic flash flooding and landslides” in Haiti and the Dominican Republic along with dangerous storms striking the Bahamas and Turks and Caicos.

Rubio, who is traveling in Asia with the president, said the Trump administration is in contact with various island governments and has sent rescue teams to the region.

“The United States is in close contact with the governments of Jamaica, Haiti, Dominican Republic and The Bahamas as they confront the devastating impacts of Hurricane Melissa. We have rescue and response teams heading to affected areas along with critical lifesaving supplies,” he wrote on social media Wednesday. “Our prayers are with the people of the Caribbean.”

Melissa is the first major natural disaster to hit the Caribbean since the Trump administration dismantled USAID, typically the lead agency in responding with foreign hurricane assistance. Rubio said the agency’s functions would be absorbed by the State Department.

The department is working with “the government accordingly to assist the people affected by Hurricane Melissa,” a spokesperson told the Miami Herald.

Disaster response teams will be deployed to areas in need of assistance.

“The State Department maintains warehouses around the world from which we can distribute lifesaving aid in the aftermath of natural disasters,” the spokesperson added. “The department has pre-positioned emergency relief supplies in six warehouses that will allow for the distribution of emergency relief supplies to people affected by the storm.”

The federal Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration was given the responsibility for international disaster relief. But much of the staff in that bureau was later laid off.

A former senior official at USAID told the Herald that the State Department absorbed some USAID staff with hurricane response experience but added that those staff “are very buried in bureaucracy and don’t have the partner networks, tools and resources they would have at USAID.”

Typically, staff at USAID would start hurricane preparations in June, which would include meeting with local officials, building networks between Caribbean nations, and conducting exercises with the U.S. military to help with logistical needs given these storms affect airports and other infrastructure.

The Trump administration “offered a lot of humanitarian assistance” in its first term, the former official noted.

The United Nations is also offering assistance and has deployed teams to the area.

Additionally, the United Nations has allocated $4 million apiece for Haiti and Cuba from its Central Emergency Response Fund.

Melissa is the most powerful storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season thus far. After its destructive path across the Caribbean, Melissa is projected to move northeast across the Atlantic Ocean and dissipate.

This story was originally published October 29, 2025 at 12:05 PM.

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