Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 105— - GLOBAL FRAGILITY › § 9803
Requires the President, working with the Secretary of State, the USAID Administrator, the Secretary of Defense, and other agency heads, to create a comprehensive, integrated ten-year Global Fragility Strategy. The plan must help stabilize conflict-affected places, tackle the long-term causes of fragility and violence, and make the United States a stronger leader in preventing extremism and violent conflict. It must study local and national causes and outside actors, set specific goals and cross‑sector approaches, support local and national leaders and vulnerable communities, use locally led programs that empower groups such as youth and women, promote justice, good governance, and accountable services, and include ways to avoid corrupt or repressive actors being helped or extremists exploiting U.S. efforts. The strategy must assign roles so the Department of State leads policy and diplomacy, USAID leads prevention and development programs, the Department of Defense acts only with joint planning and the Secretary of State’s agreement, and other agencies support as agreed. It must also describe programs and funding, coordination with foreign and international partners (including the World Bank and United Nations), public‑private partnerships, and methods to monitor and evaluate results. The plan must be made with input from civil society and local and national leaders in the countries and regions named in section 9804, plus international development groups, multilateral donors, private, academic, and philanthropic groups, and the appropriate congressional committees. Not later than 270 days after December 20, 2019, the President must send an unclassified report (with a possible classified annex) to those committees that includes the strategy’s objectives; the agencies involved and their priorities; the compact-style partnerships for local leadership and accountability; needed authorities, staff, and resources; how U.S. leadership will boost international prevention, including more engagement by G7 and G20; which officials (no lower than Assistant Secretary or Assistant Administrator) will lead the effort; and a list of priority countries and regions selected under section 9804 with reasons for those choices.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
22 U.S.C. § 9803
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73