Title 22Foreign Relations and IntercourseRelease 119-73not60

§9809 Improving and Leveraging Assistance for the Global Fragility Strategy

Title 22 › Chapter 105— GLOBAL FRAGILITY › § 9809

Last updated Apr 5, 2026|Official source

Summary

Congress asks the President, the Secretary of State, the USAID Administrator, the Secretary of Defense, and other agency heads to make the Global Fragility Strategy more flexible and faster to use. They must work with Congress to see if laws need to change. They should fold the strategy into other related programs when it makes sense. They should also back clear and accountable international funds and efforts that help public and private groups work together to stabilize places affected by conflict. The Secretary of State may set up funding tools, including a Global Fragility Fund, after talking with the right congressional committees. The strategy can use other funds and must try to raise money from non-U.S. sources to match and coordinate costs. Any fund should include donors, civil society, NGOs, the private sector, and affected countries; improve donor teamwork; set clear goals and measures; and focus on long-term local and national governance and conflict resolution through compact, country-led plans. No money can be spent without consulting the congressional committees and notifying them of the amount and planned uses at least 15 days beforehand.

Full Legal Text

Title 22, §9809

Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)It is the sense of Congress that the President, the Secretary of State, the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development, the Secretary of Defense, and the heads of other relevant Federal departments and agencies should—
(1)develop more adaptive and responsive policy and program planning, implementation, and scaling under the Global Fragility Strategy established pursuant to section 9803 of this title, and work with the appropriate congressional committees to identify any legislative changes that may be necessary to support such efforts;
(2)better integrate the strategy and other conflict and violence reduction objectives and activities into other policy and program areas, where appropriate; and
(3)support transparent and accountable multilateral funds, initiatives, and strategies to enhance and better coordinate private and public efforts to stabilize conflict-affected areas and prevent violence and fragility globally.
(b)The Global Fragility Strategy established pursuant to section 9803 of this title—
(1)may, after consultation with the appropriate congressional committees, be supported with funds other than funds authorized to be appropriated pursuant to section 9808 of this title; and
(2)shall seek to leverage funds from sources other than the United States Government in order to promote coordination and cost-matching to the maximum extent practicable.
(c)(1)Pursuant to section 2357 and 2392 of this title, and consistent with subsection (b), and after consultation with the appropriate congressional committees, the Secretary of State is authorized to establish funding mechanisms, to include the establishment of a Global Fragility Fund, to leverage, receive, coordinate, and program funds provided by other donors and private sector partners to carry out the purposes of this chapter.
(2)A funding mechanism established pursuant to paragraph (1) should—
(A)include input from and participation by key bilateral and multilateral donors, representatives of civil society, relevant nongovernmental organizations and private sector entities, and developing countries where fragility threatens to exacerbate violent extremism and undermine development;
(B)enhance donor coordination and cooperation;
(C)advance clearly defined goals, objectives, and metrics for monitoring, evaluating, and measuring progress; and
(D)focus on strengthening national and local good governance and conflict resolution capacity in fragile and conflict-affected areas over the long-term through comprehensive, compact-based agreements that support country-led strategies.
(3)Funds may not be obligated under this section except in consultation with the appropriate congressional committees and subject to the notification of such committees of the amount and proposed uses of such funds at least 15 days in advance of such proposed obligation.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

22 U.S.C. § 9809

Title 22Foreign Relations and Intercourse

Last Updated

Apr 5, 2026

Release point: 119-73not60