Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 91— - ENHANCED PARTNERSHIP WITH PAKISTAN › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - STRATEGY, ACCOUNTABILITY, MONITORING, AND OTHER PROVISIONS › § 8442
The Secretary of State, working with the Secretary of Defense, must send Congress a report within 180 days after the Pakistan Assistance Strategy Report is filed and then every 180 days until September 30, 2014. Each report must tell what U.S. help was given in the prior 180 days, showing programs, projects, places, and amounts (the first report must also list 2009 funding). It must name people or groups that got more than $100,000 (that list can be classified if needed). The report must update the plan and note better ways to make the aid work, judge how well the aid met goals with timelines, describe any shortfalls in U.S. money, equipment, skills, or staff, and say if U.S. aid caused problems (like overload in the region). It must report any waste, fraud, or abuse, say how much was spent on administration or audits, and give details on spending from any Chief of Mission Fund and any recipients over $100,000. The report must also break down aid by the categories in the strategy, evaluate Pakistan’s actions against extremist groups and terrorist camps, describe Pakistan’s steps to stop nuclear proliferation, check whether U.S. aid helped Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program, report on certain funds’ compliance with law, and assess how much civilian leaders control the military (budget oversight, chain of command, promotions, strategy, and military role in civilian affairs). The U.S. Comptroller General must, within one year of the strategy report, review that strategy, give recommendations to improve U.S. efforts, detail how Pakistan spent foreign military financing grants, and assess the aid’s effect on Pakistan’s security. Within 120 days after the President’s yearly certification, the Comptroller General must independently analyze that certification and report the results. The Secretary may combine these reports with other required Pakistan reports. The reports go to the House and Senate Appropriations, Armed Services, and the House Foreign Affairs and Senate Foreign Relations committees.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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22 U.S.C. § 8442
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73