Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Robert Menendez has ordered a comprehensive review of all of USAID’s democracy programs, following revelations that the agency engineered a “Cuban Twitter” program.

Menendez asked U.S. Agency for International Development Administrator Rajiv Shah on Thursday to provide his committee with information about all of the democracy programs to measure how the U.S. tries to influence dialogue in countries with limited free speech. The request comes after the Associated Press revealed the agency was running a secretive social network in Cuba called ZunZuneo, whose purpose was aimed at fostering unrest among Cubans toward the Castro regime.

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While the panel chairman did not quibble with the utility of such democracy-building programs like “Cuban Twitter,” Menendez (D-N.J.) did want the curtain lifted on the global reach of such programs.

“We are either going to judge whether or not we are going to be supportive of Internet access in the world or not. I think it’s consistently unfair that one set of democracy programs has the greatest scrutiny of the federal government to the absence of others,” Menendez told Shah at the end of a committee hearing on Thursday morning. “I would ask you to give me information about all of those programs and all of the programming of those programs and all of the tweets and all of the emails and everything so we can make an informed judgment here.”

Menendez also said he may request investigations into the projects by the Government Accountability Office or the inspector general overseeing USAID. A spokesman for the agency said last week that a 2013 GAO report found the Cuban social media project to be lawful.

The project in Cuba has drawn increasing scrutiny from lawmakers like Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), who called it “dumb, dumb, dumb.” Menendez seemed most concerned that the U.S. government does not equally condemn nations around the world for stifling free speech.

“I’m not one to advocate that AID all of a sudden be stripped of its democracy programs,” Menendez said. But “those commitments should not be decided by pick[ing] and choosing which country we somehow like and which countries we don’t. If they fail to provide their people access to the basic flow of information, it seems to me that we should be pursuing it. So I’d like the information on all the programs.”