Title 1 › Chapter 2— ACTS AND RESOLUTIONS; FORMALITIES OF ENACTMENT; REPEALS; SEALING OF INSTRUMENTS › § 112b
Require the Secretary of State to send, at least once a month, written reports to the top leaders of both houses of Congress and the two foreign affairs committees. The reports must list all international agreements and important non-binding instruments signed or finalized in the prior month, include their full texts, and explain the legal authority that lets each document take effect (naming all laws, treaty articles, or constitutional bases relied on and explaining any use of Article II). The Secretary must also list those that entered into force or became operative during the prior month, provide texts when they differ from earlier versions, and say whether new or changed laws or rules will be needed to carry them out. Reports should be unclassified but may include a classified annex. Make the texts and legal-authority explanations public on the State Department website: for agreements within 120 days after they enter into force, and for qualifying non-binding instruments at least every 120 days for those that became operative in the prior 120 days. Exceptions include classified materials, military-related agreements, certain foreign assistance grants, technical project annexes, and items already published by another official depositary (though legal-authority info for those must still be posted on schedule). Agencies that sign agreements must give the Secretary the texts within 15 days and legal-authority details for non-binding instruments within 15 days, and must keep sending any implementing documents as needed. Each agency must name a Chief International Agreements Officer; State has an International Agreements Compliance Officer. Oral agreements must be written down. No U.S. agreement may be signed without prior consultation with the Secretary. The Comptroller General must audit compliance within 3 years of enactment and then at least once every 3 years for the following 9 years, report results to Congress, and publish them. The President, through the Secretary, must issue rules to carry out these requirements. Key terms: appropriate congressional committees = Senate Foreign Relations and House Foreign Affairs; appropriate department or agency = the one that negotiated the instrument; Secretary = Secretary of State; international agreement = treaties and other agreements with foreign parties; qualifying non-binding instrument = a non-binding document that could significantly affect U.S. foreign policy or is requested by the committee chairs, but not those under Defense or intelligence authorities. Nothing here lets anyone withhold records that must be released by other laws, and it does not force Defense or intelligence elements to hand over certain implementing documents if they were not required to do so before the James M. Inhofe NDAA for Fiscal Year 2023.
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Citation
1 U.S.C. § 112b
Title 1 — General Provisions
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60