Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 32— - FOREIGN ASSISTANCE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT › Part Part XI— - Support for Economic and Democratic Development of the Independent States of the Former Soviet Union › § 2295a
When the United States gives help to a government of a former Soviet republic, the President must weigh need and also how much that country is doing to meet 11 key goals. These include making real progress on democracy and the rule of law, carrying out market-based economic reforms and needed laws, respecting human rights (including minorities, religion, and the right to leave), following international law and commitments like the Helsinki Final Act and the Charter of Paris, seeking peaceful solutions to ethnic and regional conflicts, adopting responsible security policies (arms control, smaller forces and budgets, not spreading nuclear/biological/chemical weapons or missile technology, and limiting arms transfers), protecting the environment, refusing to support terrorism, paying a fair share of former Soviet debts to U.S. firms, helping to find Americans who were POWs or missing, and stopping support for Cuba’s communist government (including removing troops and closing bases such as Lourdes and Cienfuegos). The President must not give aid if a government commits gross human rights or international law violations, fails key arms-control duties, after October 24, 1992 knowingly transfers missiles/missile tech against MTCR rules or WMD-related items for making weapons, is barred by sections 2799aa/2799aa–1 or 5604(a)(1)/5605, provides nonmarket trade with Cuba (as defined in section 2295b(k)(3)) without a 30-day congressional review, or if Russia fails to remove troops from Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania or stops respecting Baltic sovereignty. Bans can be waived if the President certifies aid is vital to U.S. national security, will advance human rights or democracy, is disaster relief, or is for the U.S. Information Agency secondary school exchange. Starting March 12, 1996, the President must withhold aid equal to any assistance or credits a state gives to support Cuban intelligence facilities (including Lourdes), though the President may waive that withholding with special certifications and reports to Congress. Exceptions to withholding include urgent humanitarian relief, democracy and rule-of-law programs, civilian nuclear safety upgrades, building private NGOs and market systems, the USIA school exchange, and Cooperative Threat Reduction programs.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
22 U.S.C. § 2295a
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73