CRS Insights
Palestinian Authority: U.S. Payments to Creditors as Alternative to Direct Budgetary Assistance?
Jim Zanotti, Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs (jzanotti@crs.loc.gov, 7-1441)
October 6, 2014 (IN10161)
A September 24, 2014, congressional notification (CN) from the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID) may reflect a new executive branch approach in assisting the Palestinian
Authority (PA) to pay off some of the debts it incurs in providing various benefits and services to West
Bank and Gaza residents. The CN indicates that USAID plans to obligate a total of $100 million in
FY2014 bilateral economic assistance for the Palestinians toward direct U.S. payments to PA creditors,
as follows:
While not provided directly to the PA, $75 million in requested funds will be used to make payments
directly to two Israeli fuel companies to pay a portion of the debt owed by the PA, and to make
payments to the Bank of Jordan to reimburse the Bank for payments that the Bank has made on behalf
of the PA for debt incurred for fuel purchased for the West Bank and Gaza…. An additional $25 million
will be applied to a line of credit at the Bank of Jordan to reimburse the bank for debt payments made
by the Bank on behalf of the PA to six non-governmental hospitals in East Jerusalem.
The previous U.S. approach had provided budgetary assistance directly to a PA account, subject to a
number of oversight requirements intended to ensure that the PA used the assistance to pay creditors.
Since FY2008, the Bush and Obama Administrations have provided more than $1 billion in budgetary
assistance to the PA, alongside other types of economic and non-lethal security assistance for the West
Bank and Gaza, as described in CRS Report RS22967, U.S. Foreign Aid to the Palestinians, by Jim
Zanotti.
While scrutinizing the general desirability and timing of the assistance proposed in the CN and this
apparently new approach to addressing PA debts, Congress may also consider what implications this
approach might have for existing legal conditions on U.S. aid to the PA. It is unclear whether this
approach might apply only to the specific payment that was notified, or might also be adopted for
subsequent U.S. aid disbursements to the Palestinians.
Potential Implications for Existing Legal Conditions
In the event one or more of the following situations occur, among others, current U.S. law constrains
or prohibits budgetary support to the PA, or requires an executive branch certification or national
security waiver for the provision of such support:
Hamas Agreement Regarding PA Governing Arrangement. If a PA government is formed
via agreement with Hamas over which Hamas exercises "undue influence" (§7040(f)(1) of Division
K of P.L. 113-76, Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014, as extended by P.L. 113-164, Continuing
Appropriations Resolution, 2015).
In June 2014, PA President Mahmoud Abbas appointed a new PA government with nominal
control over the West Bank and Gaza. Hamas agreed to the government's formation, but it does
not include any Hamas ministers. After the creation of this new PA government, the Obama
Administration stated its intent to continue to assist the PA financially and to carefully monitor the
new government's composition and actions. The House Appropriations Committee proposed
legislation (§7040(f) of H.R. 5013, Department of State, Foreign Operations and Related
Programs Appropriations Act, 2015) that could change the conditions on aid to such a
government. The Senate Appropriations Committee has proposed legislation (§7040(f) of S. 2499)
that apparently would not change existing conditions.
Palestinian Membership in the United Nations or Related Organizations, or Subjection
of Israelis to International Criminal Court (ICC) Investigations. If the Palestinians obtain

membership in the United Nations or other U.N. specialized agencies outside of Israeli-Palestinian
negotiations, and/or initiate "an International Criminal Court [ICC] judicially authorized
investigation, or actively support such an investigation, that subjects Israeli nationals to an
investigation for alleged crimes against Palestinians" (§7041(j)(2)(A) of Division K of P.L. 113-76).
Media reports indicate that Abbas plans to arrange for a proposed U.N. Security Council resolution
to be submitted on the Palestinians' behalf in the fall of 2014 regarding a potential deadline for
Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank. If the proposed resolution is not adopted, many reports
assert that the Palestinians might seek membership in "international institutions and agencies"
and take action aimed at establishing ICC jurisdiction over Israeli actions in the West Bank and
Gaza.
These conditions explicitly apply to assistance "to" (§7040(f) of P.L. 113-76) or "for" (§7041(j)(2)(A))
the PA. It is unclear whether the conditions, if triggered, might apply to payments to third-party
creditors of the PA, such as the payments proposed in the September 24 CN. One might argue that the
conditions should apply because the PA would receive the same pecuniary benefit whether it receives
the money or the United States pays the PA's creditors directly. However, another view might hold that
the conditions should not apply because the PA would not acquire possession of or control over the
funds at any point in the process.
Possible Options for Congress
Congressional options in response to the CN, including the proposal to make direct payments to PA
creditors, may or may not include:
holding private consultations with the Administration and/or public committee hearings;
placing informal conditional or unconditional congressional holds on the notified assistance; and
modifying statutory conditions on U.S. economic assistance to the Palestinian Authority.
Potential congressional action on this issue could hinge to some extent on how Members of Congress
view U.S. regional and global priorities and the potential utility of aid to the Palestinians—including the
manner in and level at which it is given and the conditions attached to it—in advancing these priorities.