Department of State, Foreign Operations, and 
June 27, 2022 
Related Programs: FY2022 Budget and 
Cory R. Gill 
Appropriations 
Analyst in Foreign Affairs   
Each year, Congress considers 12 distinct appropriations measures to fund federal 
Marian L. Lawson 
programs and activities. One of these is the Department of State, Foreign Operations, 
Section Research Manager 
and Related Programs (SFOPS) bill, which includes funding for U.S. diplomatic 
  
activities, cultural exchanges, development and security assistance, and participation in 
Emily M. Morgenstern 
multilateral organizations, among other international activities.  
Analyst in Foreign 
Assistance and Foreign 
On May 28, 2021, the Biden Administration released its proposed FY2022 budget 
Policy 
request, which called for $62.121 billion, after rescissions of prior year funds, for 
  
SFOPS accounts. The original FY2022 request was about 13% less than the total 
FY2021-enacted level, which included nearly $16 billion in emergency funds, but 11.5% 
 
more than enacted FY2021 levels when emergency funding was excluded. The 
Administration submitted a supplemental emergency budget request that included $9.35 billion in SFOPS 
accounts on March 2, 2022, to address Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the ongoing global COVID-19 response. 
The Administration made a second supplemental funding request on April 28, 2022, calling for an additional 
$14.76 billion in SFOPS funding related to Ukraine. This brought the total FY2022 SFOPS request to $86.131 
billion, net of rescissions. 
The House of Representatives passed a FY2022 SFOPS bill, H.R. 4373, on July 28, 2021. The bill would have 
provided a total of $62.401 billion in net budget authority for SFOPS accounts. FY2022 SFOPS legislation, S. 
3075, was introduced in the Senate on October 26, 2021; no further action was taken. Congress enacted four 
continuing resolutions to fund federal agencies in FY2022, largely at FY2021 levels but including $3.448 billion 
in additional emergency SFOPS funding, before enacting a consolidated appropriations bill, P.L. 117-103, which 
the President signed into law on March 15, 2022. The legislation provided $63.059 billion in net SFOPS funding, 
of which $6.80 billion was emergency funding for Ukraine. Congress enacted additional supplemental funding 
legislation on May 21, 2022, the Additional Ukraine Supplemental Appropriations Act (AUSAA, P.L. 117-128), 
which included $18.946 billion for SFOPS accounts. Total enacted SFOPS funding for FY2022 to date, including 
P.L. 117-103, P.L. 117-128, and emergency funding in continuing resolutions, is $85.453 billion after rescissions, 
or about 19% above the FY2021 total enacted level and 1% below the Administration’s amended FY2022 request. 
Within 
Department of State and Related Agencies accounts, total FY2022-enacted funding for the Diplomatic 
Programs account and Embassy Security, Construction and Maintenance account increased by 2% and 7%, 
respectively, over FY2021 funding levels. Significant changes were seen within some smaller State Department 
accounts, including the Capital Investment Fund (+24%), Emergencies in the Diplomatic and Consular Service 
(+3968%), and Repatriation Loans (-48%), and in related accounts, including Contributions to International 
Organizations (+10%), International Broadcasting Operations (+10%), and the U.S. Institute for Peace (+20%). 
Within 
Foreign Operations accounts, enacted FY2022 funding is 27% higher than FY2021 funding. Notable 
changes between FY2021- and FY2022-enacted funding levels for specific accounts largely reflect a shift in the 
focus of emergency funding from addressing COVID-19 to addressing the crises in Afghanistan and Ukraine. 
Funding increased significantly for the Assistance to Europe, Eurasia and Central Asia (+110%), International 
Disaster Assistance (+157%), Migration and Refugee Assistance (+26%), Emergency Refugee and Migration 
Assistance (+355%), and International Development Finance Corporation (+65%) accounts, among others, while 
decreasing substantially for Global Health Programs (-26%), International Organizations and Programs (-56%), 
and Debt Restructuring (-79%), among others. 
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Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
Appendix A presents an account-by-account comparison of the FY2022 SFOPS request; proposed, committee-
approved, and enacted FY2022 SFOPS legislation; and FY2021 SFOPS enacted funding
. Appendix B provides a 
similar comparison focused specifically on the International Affairs budget function
. Appendix C depicts the 
organization of the SFOPS appropriation. 
 
This report tracks SFOPS appropriations, comparing funding levels for accounts and purposes across proposals 
and legislation. It does not provide extensive analysis of international affairs policy issues. For in-depth analysis 
and contextual information on international affairs issues, consult the wide range of CRS reports on specific 
subjects, such as global health, diplomatic security, and U.S. participation in the United Nations. For more 
information on SFOPS accounts, see CRS Report R40482, 
Department of State, Foreign Operations 
Appropriations: A Guide to Component Accounts, by Nick M. Brown and Cory R. Gill. 
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Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
Contents 
Overview ......................................................................................................................................... 1 
Overseas Contingency Operations and Emergency Funds ........................................................ 2 
Congressional Action ...................................................................................................................... 4 
State Department Operations and Related Agency Funding Highlights ......................................... 5 
Diplomatic Programs ................................................................................................................ 7 
Diplomatic Security .................................................................................................................. 9 
Assessed Contributions to International Organizations and 
Peacekeeping Missions ................................................................................................... 11 
Foreign Operations Highlights ...................................................................................................... 13 
Cross-Cutting Issues ................................................................................................................ 16 
Climate Change ................................................................................................................. 16 
COVID-19 ........................................................................................................................ 16 
Rising Authoritarianism .................................................................................................... 17 
Foreign Operations Sectors ..................................................................................................... 18 
Global Health Programs (GHP) ........................................................................................ 18 
Humanitarian Assistance ................................................................................................... 20 
Security Assistance ........................................................................................................... 22 
Development Assistance, Export Promotion, and Related Assistance .............................. 24 
Regional Assistance ................................................................................................................ 26 
Outlook .......................................................................................................................................... 27 
 
Figures 
Figure 1. International Affairs as a Portion of the Federal Budget, FY2022 Est. ............................ 1 
Figure 2. SFOPS Funding, FY2012-FY2022 .................................................................................. 3 
Figure 3. U.S. Humanitarian Assistance, Requested and Enacted,  by Account (FY2014-
FY2022) ..................................................................................................................................... 21 
Figure 4. Security Assistance by Account, FY2020-FY2022 ........................................................ 23 
Figure 5. Regional Assistance, FY2020 vs. FY2022 Request ....................................................... 26 
  
Figure C-1. International Affairs Budget Components.................................................................. 39 
 
Tables 
Table 1. SFOPS Requests and Actual/Enacted Funding, FY2013-FY2022 .................................... 2 
Table 2. State Department and Related Agency: Selected Accounts, FY2020-FY2022 ................. 5 
Table 3. Diplomatic Security Annual Appropriations, FY2020-FY2022 ...................................... 10 
Table 4. U.S. Payments of Assessments to International Organizations and Peacekeeping 
Missions, FY2020-FY2022 ........................................................................................................ 12 
Table 5. Foreign Assistance, by Type, FY2020-FY2022 ............................................................... 14 
Table 6. Global Health Appropriations, FY2018-FY2022 ............................................................ 19 
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Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
Table 7. Select Development Sectors, FY2020-FY2022 ............................................................... 24 
  
Table A-1. Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
Appropriations: FY2021-FY2022 .............................................................................................. 29 
Table B-1. International Affairs Budget, FY2021-FY2022 ........................................................... 38 
 
Appendixes 
Appendix A. SFOPS Funding, by Account ................................................................................... 29 
Appendix B. International Affairs Budget ..................................................................................... 37 
Appendix C. International Affairs Components Chart .................................................................. 39 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 39 
 
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Overview
Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
Overview 
Department of State, Foreign Operations and Related Programs (SFOPS) appropriations support a 
wide range of U.S. activities around the world, including the operation of U.S. embassies; 
diplomatic activities; educational and cultural exchanges; international development, security, and 
humanitarian assistance; and U.S. participation in multilateral organizations. The SFOPS 
appropriation closely aligns with the International Affairs budget function, which typically 
represents about 1% of the annual federal budget (
see Figure 1).1 
Figure 1. International Affairs as a Portion of the Federal Budget, FY2022 Est. 
 
Sources: FY2022 Budget Historic Table 5.1; CRS calculations. 
Note: Reflects estimated budget authority, FY2022. 
 
On May 28, 2021, the Biden Administration released its proposed FY2022 budget request, which 
called for $62.656 billion in new budget authority for SFOPS accounts ($62.121 billion if 
proposed rescissions of prior year funding are subtracted).2 The Administration submitted a 
supplemental budget request on March 2, 2022, including $9.35 billion in SFOPS accounts to 
address needs related to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the global Coronavirus Disease 2019 
(COVID-19) response. The Administration made a second supplemental funding request on April 
28, 2022, calling for an additional $14.76 billion in SFOPS funding related to the war in Ukraine. 
This brought the total FY2022 SFOPS request to $86.131 billion, net of rescissions ($86.666 
before rescissions).3 
The Administration’s original FY2022 request was 13% less than the total FY2021-enacted level, 
which included almost $16 billion in emergency funds, and 11% more than the enacted FY2021 
                                                 
1 The SFOPS budget aligns closely but not exactly with Function 150 (International Affairs) of the federal budget. The 
primary exception is international food aid programs, which are part of Function 150 but funded through the agriculture 
appropriation. SFOPS also includes funding for international commissions in the Function 300 budget. 
2 Rescissions of prior year funding do not affect new funding levels, but are considered when calculating the total 
budget impact of a proposal for purposes such as compliance with the subcommittee’s 302(b) allocation or spending 
caps imposed by law.  
3 See letters from OMB Acting Director Shalanda Young to Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, at 
https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/COVID-and-Ukraine-Supplemental-Funding-Request-
Pelosi.pdf and https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-
content/uploads/2022/04/FY_2022_Emergency_Supplemental_Assistance-to-Ukraine_4.28.2022.pdf.  
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level when emergency funding, used primarily for COVID-19 response, was excluded.4 This first 
SFOPS budget request of the Biden Administration was significantly higher, even before the 
supplemental request, than all Trump Administration SFOPS budget requests. It was also higher 
than SFOPS annual funding levels enacted in the past decade, in current dollars, with the 
exception of FY2021 
(Table 1). With the $24.01 billion in supplemental funding requests 
included, the Administration’s total FY2022 request was about 20% more than FY2021 total 
enacted funding.  
Congress has enacted six FY2022 appropriations bills (including continuing resolutions) funding 
SFOPS accounts to date (see 
“Congressional Action,” below), totaling $85.453 billion, after 
rescissions, or about 1% less than the Administration’s request (including supplemental requests) 
and 19% more than FY2021-enacted funding. 
Table 1. SFOPS Requests and Actual/Enacted Funding, FY2013-FY2022 
(In billions of current U.S. dollars) 
 
FY2013  FY2014  FY2015  FY2016  FY2017  FY2018  FY2019 
FY2020  FY2021 
FY2022 
Request 
56.41 
51.96 
55.01 
54.83 
60.21 
40.21 
41.66 
43.10 
44.12 
86.13 
Actual/Enac. 
51.91 
50.89 
54.39 
54.52 
59.78 
54.18 
54.38 
57.37 
71.58 
85.45 
Difference 
-8.0% 
-2.1% 
-1.1% 
-0.6% 
-0.7% 
+34.7% 
+30.5% 
+33.1% 
+62.2% 
-0.8% 
Sources: Annual SFOPS Congressional Budget Justifications (CBJs) prepared by the Department of State and 
U.S. Agency of International Development; P.L. 116-6; P.L. 116-94; P.L. 116-123; P.L. 116-136; P.L. 116-260; P.L. 
117-2; P.L. 117-31; P.L. 117-43; P.L. 117-70; P.L. 117-103, P.L. 117-128. The FY2022 supplemental funding 
request is accessible at https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/COVID-and-Ukraine-
Supplemental-Funding-Request-Pelosi.pdf and https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-
content/uploads/2022/04/FY_2022_Emergency_Supplemental_Assistance-to-Ukraine_4.28.2022.pdf. 
Note: Includes OCO, emergency supplemental funds, and rescissions. FY2021 and FY2022 actual/enacted figures 
are enacted, while FY2013-FY2020 figures are actual. 
Overseas Contingency Operations and Emergency Funds 
From FY2012 to FY2021, the appropriations process was shaped by discretionary spending caps 
put in place by the Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA; P.L. 112-25). Congress managed the 
constraints imposed by the BCA in part by repeatedly amending the BCA to raise the caps, and 
also by designating a portion of annual SFOPS appropriations as “Overseas Contingency 
Operations” (OCO) or “emergency” funding, both of which were excluded from BCA 
discretionary budget limits. Congress began using the OCO designation in SFOPS appropriations 
in FY2012. OCO’s use expanded considerably in funding level and scope until FY2017, when 
OCO-designated SFOPS funding peaked at $20.80 billion (nearly 35% of SFOPS funds that 
year), before leveling off at $8 billion annually between FY2019 and FY2021.5 
In addition to OCO funds, Congress has periodically used funding designated as “emergency” to 
address a range of unanticipated needs. Congress used this designation in FY2020 and FY2021 
primarily to address needs related to the COVID-19 pandemic abroad and humanitarian 
                                                 
4 For information on international affairs funding for COVID-19 response, see CRS In Focus IF11496, 
COVID-19 and 
Foreign Assistance: Issues for Congress, by Nick M. Brown, Marian L. Lawson, and Emily M. Morgenstern, and CRS 
Report R46319, 
Novel Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19): Q&A on Global Implications and Responses, coordinated by 
Tiaji Salaam-Blyther. 
5 For more information on the use of OCO in the international affairs budget, see CRS In Focus IF10143, 
Foreign 
Affairs Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) Funding: Background and Current Status, by Emily M. Morgenstern. 
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assistance for Afghanistan and Afghan refugees. Like OCO-designated funding, emergency-
designated funding did not count toward the BCA discretionary spending caps and could 
therefore serve as an alternative to the OCO designation. Before the use of OCO in SFOPS, 
supplemental emergency appropriations were the primary mechanism for funding contingency 
activities.  
The FY2022 appropriations cycle was the first in a decade for which the BCA was not a factor, 
and may mark the end of the OCO designation within SFOPS legislation. While Administrations 
have not requested OCO funding in the international affairs budget since FY2018, the FY2022-
enacted SFOPS appropriations are the first since FY2012 to not include OCO-designated funds 
(Figure 2). Although BCA spending caps no longer apply, SFOPS spending is limited by the 
subcommittee allocation approved in the annual budget resolution or by the Appropriations 
Committee. Emergency-designated funding is not counted toward this allocation, so the 
designation continues to be an important budgetary tool. Congress designated $29.19 billion, or 
about 34% of enacted FY2022 SFOPS funds, as emergency funding. 
Figure 2. SFOPS Funding, FY2012-FY2022 
(In billions of current U.S. dollars) 
 
Note: FY2021 and FY2022 emergency, OCO, and base numbers are enacted funding levels; earlier year data are 
actual funding as reported in annual SFOPS CBJs. 
Sources: Annual SFOPS CBJs; P.L. 116-94; P.L. 116-123; P.L. 116-136; P.L. 116-260; P.L. 117-2; P.L. 117-31; P.L. 
117-43; P.L. 117-70; P.L. 117-103; P.L. 117-128; supplemental request letters from OMB; CRS calculations.
 
OCO-designated funding became largely indistinguishable in recent years from base funding in 
terms of the activities it supported, whereas emergency-designated funding continues to be used 
primarily for short-term needs arising from unanticipated events. For this reason, this report 
generally groups base and OCO funding from prior years together, comparing FY2022 requested 
funding levels with total FY2021 enacted funding (base + OCO + emergency) as well as to 
nonemergency funding (base + OCO) to serve various analytic purposes. 
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Congressional Action 
Congressional action on FY2022 appropriations began with subcommittee hearings before the 
Administration transmitted its full request to Congress in late May, 2021—months later than is 
typical, although late submissions are not unusual at the start of a new Administration. 
Subsequent congressional action is detailed below. 
House Legislation. The House SFOPS subcommittee approved a FY2022 bill, H.R. 4373, by 
voice vote on June 18, 2021. The legislation, which included $62.976 billion in new SFOPS 
budget authority ($62.401 billion after rescissions), was approved by the full Appropriations 
Committee on July 1, 2021, and by the House of Representatives on July 28, 2021. 
Senate Legislation. FY2022 SFOPS legislation, S. 3075, was introduced in the Senate on 
October 26. The proposal was not considered or approved by Congress at any level, and is not 
included in the tables and figures in this report, with the exception of
 Table A-1 in
 Appendix A.  
Continuing Resolutions. No appropriations legislation for FY2022, including for SFOPS, was 
enacted before FY2022 began on October 1, 2021. To prevent a lapse in appropriations, a 
continuing resolution, the Extending Government Funding and Delivering Emergency Assistance 
Act (P.L. 117-43), was enacted on September 30, 2021, to continue funding federal agencies until 
December 3, 2021. Funding was largely continued at FY2021 levels, but the legislation provided 
an additional $2.17 billion in SFOPS accounts for activities related to assisting individuals at risk 
in Afghanistan.6 A second continuing resolution, the Further Extending Government Funding Act 
(P.L. 117-70), was enacted and signed into law on December 3, extending appropriations through 
February 18, 2022. This legislation also largely continued SFOPS funding at the FY2021 level, 
while including an additional $1.28 billion within SFOPS accounts to support evacuation and 
resettlement activities related to the crisis in Afghanistan.7 Third and fourth continuing 
resolutions, P.L. 117-86 and P.L. 117-95, extended funding for SFOPS accounts through March 
11 and March 15, respectively, at the P.L. 117-70 level without additional funds. 
Consolidated Appropriations Act. The House and Senate, on March 9 and 10, respectively, 
passed the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022, which was signed by President Biden on 
March 15 and became P.L. 117-103. The act included $58.163 billion in SFOPS base funding in 
Division K ($56.259 billion after rescissions) and $6.800 billion in supplemental emergency 
funding related to Ukraine in Division N, for a total of $64.963 billion before rescissions.  
Second Ukraine Supplemental. Congress enacted the Additional Ukraine Supplemental 
Appropriations Act (AUSAA, P.L. 117-128) on May 21, 2022, which included $18.946 billion for 
SFOPS accounts. Total enacted SFOPS funding for FY2022 to date, including P.L. 117-103, P.L. 
117-128, and emergency funding in continuing resolutions, is $85.453 billion after rescissions, or 
about 19% above the FY2021 total enacted level and 1% below the Administration’s amended 
FY2022 request.  
                                                 
6 P.L. 117-43 included FY2022 SFOPS account emergency funding in Division C, Title IV: $276.9 million for 
Emergency Diplomatic and Consular Services, $400 million for International Disaster Assistance, and $1,076.1 million 
for Emergency Refugee and Migration Assistance.  
7 P.L. 117-70 included the following SFOPS emergency funding, all in Division B, which provided supplemental 
appropriations to address the situation in Afghanistan: $44.3 million for Diplomatic Programs, $36 million for 
Emergencies in the Diplomatic and Consular Service, and $1.200 billion for Emergency Refugee and Migration 
Assistance. Account details for the supplemental funding in the continuing resolutions is provided in the 
“State 
Department Operations and Related Agency Funding Highlights” and 
“Foreign Operations Highlights” sections of this 
report. 
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State Department Operations and Related Agency 
Funding Highlights 
The Biden Administration’s initial FY2022 request sought $18.35 billion in funding for the 
Department of State and Related Agency appropriations accounts, or approximately 5% more 
than the FY2021 enacted level of $17.49 billion (including emergency funds). Priorities the 
Administration intended to fund through these accounts in FY2022 included 
  revitalizing the foreign policy workforce and broadening diversity, equity, and 
inclusion; 
  modernizing the State Department’s information technology and enhancing 
cybersecurity; 
  supporting international organizations and peacekeeping; and 
  sustaining security operations and consular services.8 
House Legislation. H.R. 4373, the House-passed measure, would have provided $18.20 billion 
for the State Department and Related Agency appropriations accounts. This would have been an 
increase of over 8% relative to FY2021-enacted nonemergency funds, a 4% increase over total 
FY2021-enacted funding, and a nearly 1% decrease from the Biden Administration’s request. 
Continuing Resolutions. P.L. 117-43, the continuing resolution that funded federal agencies in 
FY2022 through December 3, 2021, included an additional $276.9 million for the Emergencies in 
the Diplomatic and Consular Service (EDCS) account. The law specified that such funding was 
for “support for Operation Allies Welcome and related efforts by the Department of State, 
including additional relocations of individuals at risk as a result of the situation in Afghanistan 
and related expenses” and to reimburse the account for previous obligations. The subsequent 
continuing resolution, P.L. 117-70, expired on February 18, 2022. It provided an additional $44.3 
million for the Diplomatic Programs account and $36 million for EDCS for the same purposes as 
those specified in P.L. 117-43. The two subsequent continuing resolutions (P.L. 117-86 and P.L. 
117-95), the latter of which expired on March 15, 2022, provided budget authority for the 
Department of State and Related Agency appropriations accounts at the FY2021 level and did not 
include supplemental funds.  
Table 2. State Department and Related Agency: Selected Accounts, FY2020-FY2022 
(In billions of current U.S. dollars; includes OCO and Emergency Supplemental funds) 
% Change, 
% Change, 
FY21 
FY21 
Enacted 
Enacted to 
FY2020 
FY2021 
FY2022 
to FY22 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY22 
Account 
Actual 
Enacted 
Request 
Request 
House 
Enacteda 
Enacted 
Diplomatic Programs 
9.51 
9.37 
9.49 
1.2% 
9.48 
9.54 
1.8% 
Worldwide Security Protection 
4.10 
4.12 
4.08 
-1.1% 
4.08 
3.79 
-8.1% 
Embassy Security, Construction & 
1.98 
1.95 
1.98 
1.7% 
2.00 
2.10 
7.3% 
Maintenance 
Educational & Cultural Exchange 
0.74 
0.74 
0.74 
0.1% 
0.75 
0.75 
1.7% 
Programs 
                                                 8 U.S. Department of State, 
FY2022 Budget Request, slide presentation, May 28, 2021, p. 10. 
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% Change, 
% Change, 
FY21 
FY21 
Enacted 
Enacted to 
FY2020 
FY2021 
FY2022 
to FY22 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY22 
Account 
Actual 
Enacted 
Request 
Request 
House 
Enacteda 
Enacted 
International Organizations 
3.00 
2.96 
3.59 
21.2% 
3.59 
3.16 
6.7% 
U.S. Agency for Global Media 
0.81 
0.80 
0.81 
0.9% 
0.82 
0.89 
10% 
State and Related Agency Total 
17.64 
17.49 
18.35 
4.9% 
18.20 
18.04 
3.1% 
(includes Function 300 funding and other 
commissions)  
Sources: FY2022 SFOPS CBJ; H.R. 4373; P.L. 116-260; P.L. 117-43; P.L. 117-70; P.L. 117-103; P.L. 117-128; CRS 
calculations. State and Related Agency totals include additional funding for accounts not listed above. 
a.  Includes supplemental funding provided in P.L. 117-43 and P.L. 117-70. 
Consolidated and Supplemental Appropriations. P.L. 117-103 included $17.21 billion in base 
State Department and Related Agency funding and $154 million in emergency supplemental 
funds to address the crisis in Ukraine, bringing the total enacted funding for these accounts in 
FY2022 to nearly $17.73 billion (prior to passage of the AUSAA, which is discussed in the 
following subsection). This funding level is about a 1% increase from the aggregate funding 
provided for these accounts in FY2021. When comparing nonemergency funding only, FY2022 
appropriations comprised a 2% increase from FY2021 funds. When all funding is considered, 
among the most significant funding increases within these accounts is for the Emergencies in the 
Diplomatic and Consular Service account, for which appropriations increased nearly 4,000%, 
from $7.89 million in FY2021 to about $313 million in FY2022. Congress provided the entirety 
of this increase in P.L. 117-43 and P.L. 117-70, largely to fund relocations of individuals at risk in 
Afghanistan and related expenses.  
Among the accounts for which annual appropriations declined was Repatriations Loans, which is 
used to provide direct emergency loans to assist U.S. citizens abroad who have no other source of 
funds to return to the United States. Congress provided $1.3 million for this account in FY2022, a 
48% decline from the $2.5 million included for this account in FY2021. This reflects a reduction 
in demand for these loans following a surge during the early months of the COVID-19 
pandemic.9  
AUSAA. The Administration’s second supplemental request for SFOPS Ukraine-related funding 
did not include any call for funds for the State Department and Related Agency appropriations 
accounts. However, Congress included a total of $314 million in the AUSAA (P.L. 117-128) for 
these accounts. As a result, FY2022 total enacted funding for the Department of State and Related 
Agency appropriations accounts equals $18.04 billion, or 3.1% more than FY2021 total enacted 
funding. 
Accounts to which Congress appropriated the largest shares of these funds in the AUSAA are 
Diplomatic Programs ($190 million) and Embassy Security, Construction, and Maintenance 
($110 million), to which funding was provided “to respond to the situation in Ukraine and in 
countries impacted by the situation in Ukraine.” Congress appropriated an additional $4 million 
to the State Department’s Office of Inspector General account and $10 million to the Capital 
Investment Fund (CIF) account. Congress previously established the CIF account in statute to 
allow the State Department to carry out “the procurement and enhancement of information                                                  
9 U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1: Department of State Diplomatic 
Engagement, Fiscal Year 2022, p. 353. 
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technology and other related capital investments” and to ensure the efficient management of such 
resources.10 
                                Consular and Border Security Programs 
The Consular and Border Security Programs (CBSP) account funds many of the State Department’s core 
consular functions, including the adjudication of visa and passport applications. While CBSP typically is funded 
through consular fees and surcharges, fee col ections have declined considerably amid global travel restrictions 
imposed during the COVID-19 pandemic.11 The Biden Administration forecasted that fee col ections would 
remain below pre-COVID-19 levels during FY2022. It therefore requested that Congress provide a $320 mil ion 
appropriation for the CBSP account, extend broadened fee expenditure and transfer authorities enacted during 
the COVID-19 pandemic, and authorize new or increased consular fees or surcharges.12 Had it been enacted, the 
House bil  would have appropriated $320 mil ion for CBSP and included some, but not all, of the fee-related 
legislative provisions the Biden Administration requested. Congress did not include an annual appropriation for 
CBSP in P.L. 117-103. However, this law provided the State Department the authority, which the Biden 
Administration did not request, to deposit passport fees currently transferred to the General Fund of the 
Treasury to the CBSP account. Congress estimates that this wil  provide at least $340 mil ion in additional 
resources for consular operations in FY2022.13  P.L. 117-103 further contained some of the fee-related legislative 
provisions the Biden Administration requested, including an extension of broadened authority for the State 
Department to expend passport and immigrant visa surcharge col ections to provide consular services. Congress 
originally included this authority in the CARES Act.14 
Diplomatic Programs 
The Diplomatic Programs account is the State Department’s principal operating appropriation and 
funds several programs and functions, including 
  most domestic and overseas Foreign Service and Civil Service personnel salaries; 
  the State Department’s recruitment, diversity, and inclusion programs; 
  public diplomacy programs; and  
  the operations and programs of the State Department’s strategic and managerial 
units, including the Bureaus of Administration, Budget and Planning, Information 
Resource Management (the State Department’s information technology bureau), 
and Legislative Affairs, as well as the Office of the Chief of Protocol.15 
The Biden Administration’s FY2022 request for the Diplomatic Programs account totaled $9.49 
billion, approximately 1% more than the $9.37 billion Congress provided in FY2021. As part of 
the Biden Administration’s stated commitment to revitalizing the foreign policy workforce, it 
requested funding for an additional 485 Foreign Service and Civil Service positions, 337 of which 
would have been funded through Diplomatic Programs.16 Within this request were 130 new 
Foreign Service Officer positions the Administration indicated would have been focused on                                                  
10 See 22 U.S.C. §2684a. 
11 To review the statutory authorization for the CBSP account, see Division J, Title VII, Section 7081 of P.L. 115-31.  
12 U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1, pp. 68-79.  
13 See Section 7069(e) of Division K of P.L. 117-103 and Joint Explanatory Statement Accompanying Division K of 
P.L. 117-103, p. 101.  
14 See Section 7069(b) of Division K of P.L. 117-103. 
15 U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification: Department of State, Foreign Operations, and 
Related Programs, Fiscal Year 2022, pp. 16-20. 
16 
Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1: Department of State Diplomatic Engagement, Fiscal Year 2022, p. 
6. 
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advancing U.S. prosperity and countering Chinese economic influence, defending U.S. interests 
against malign influence from Russia and other foreign actors, and engaging with the United 
Nations and other organizations.17 The request included funding for 20 new Civil Service 
positions to support the Bureau of Information Resource Management’s cybersecurity and risk 
management programs.18  
The Biden Administration’s Diplomatic Programs request also sought $46.5 million for diversity 
and inclusion resources, which would have been $25.1 million more than the funding provided 
for these purposes in FY2021.19 Among other priorities, the request proposed language for 
inclusion in the FY2022 SFOPS appropriations measure that the State Department maintained 
would have expanded its ability to offer paid internships and $10 million to fund such internships. 
The State Department noted that providing compensation for interns would “ensure that all 
eligible candidates can take advantage of [internship programs], regardless of background.”20 The 
request also prioritized disability hiring programs; additional diversity and inclusion content 
within orientation, leadership, and tradecraft classes for State Department personnel; and 
coaching services for employees from under-represented groups.21 
House Legislation. H.R. 4373 would have appropriated approximately $9.48 billion for 
Diplomatic Programs. This overall funding level was less than the Biden Administration’s request 
(se
e Table 2). The House bill sought to provide $3.22 billion for the Diplomatic Programs 
account’s Human Resources funding category (through which funds are directed toward salaries 
for domestic and overseas U.S. direct hire employees), identical to the Biden Administration’s 
request for Human Resources.22 Additionally, the House Appropriations Committee report 
accompanying this bill stated that it provided sufficient resources for the Administration to 
“restore and expand” the State Department’s workforce.23 With respect to diversity and inclusion, 
the committee report noted that the bill included funding for the State Department “to prioritize 
initiatives aimed at making real and sustainable progress in diversifying our foreign policy 
workforce.”24 Furthermore, H.R. 4373 included language similar to what the State Department 
requested that would have enabled the State Department to offer additional paid internships. The 
committee report recommended not less than $10 million for this purpose, in line with the 
Administration’s request.25  
Consolidated and Supplemental Appropriations (including AUSAA). The FY2022-enacted 
appropriations for the Diplomatic Programs account
 (including all supplemental funding) total 
$9.54 billion, or around 0.5% more than the Biden Administration request.26 Excluding all 
supplemental funding, which comprises approximately $9.18 billion, the FY2022 appropriation is                                                  
17 Ibid., p. 48 
18 Ibid., p. 50.  
19 Ibid., p. 46. 
20 Ibid., pp. 41, 95. 
21 Ibid., pp. 90, 95-96. 
22 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
State Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
Appropriations Bill, 2022, report to accompany H.R. 4373, 117th Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. 117-84, (Washington, DC: 
GPO, 2020), p. 10; U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1, pp. 48, 53. 
23 House Committee on Appropriations, 
State Foreign Operations, and Related Programs Appropriations Bill, 2022, p. 
4. 
24 Ibid., p. 6.  
25 Ibid., p. 12. See also Section 7063(d)(4) of H.R. 4373. 
26 In this context, “supplemental funding” means funding Congress provided for the Department of State and Related 
Agency appropriations accounts in P.L. 117-43, P.L. 117-70, and Division N of P.L. 117-103. 
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about 3% less than the Biden Administration’s FY2022 request. Division K of P.L. 117-103 
provided the entirety of the $3.22 billion the Biden Administration requested for the account’s 
Human Resources component. The joint explanatory statement (JES) accompanying this law 
stated that it includes funding for additional State Department Foreign Service and Civil Service 
positions. The JES further instructed the Secretary of State to consult with Congress regarding 
staffing levels prior to submitting an operating plan to Congress detailing the specific uses of 
these funds.27  
The JES also stated that the FY2022 consolidated appropriation “includes funding above the 
fiscal year 2021 level for workforce diversity initiatives.”28 However, it did not fund all of the 
Biden Administration’s diversity and inclusion priorities at requested levels. For example, the law 
authorized the State Department to provide up to $8 million for paid internships, which is less 
than the requested figure of $10 million.29 In other diversity and inclusion-related areas, the law 
included funding above what the Biden Administration requested. In one case, the JES expressed 
support for the State Department’s establishment of its Office of Diversity and Inclusion and 
provided the Office $4 million in funding, which exceeded the Biden Administration’s request of 
$3 million.30 While neither P.L. 117-103 nor the JES included line item funding or directives for 
all of the diversity and inclusion programs the State Department highlighted in its request, the law 
provided the State Department the flexibility to fund these programs with available resources. 
Furthermore, the JES included a reporting requirement instructing the State Department to share 
information regarding its diversity and inclusion priorities, including funding and staff allocated 
to these efforts.31  
Diplomatic Security 
The Worldwide Security Protection (WSP) allocation within the Diplomatic Programs account 
and the Embassy Security, Construction, and Maintenance (ESCM) account are often referred to 
as the “diplomatic security accounts” within SFOPS. WSP funds the Bureau of Diplomatic 
Security (DS), which is responsible for implementing the State Department’s security programs 
to protect U.S. embassies and other overseas posts, diplomatic residences, and domestic State 
Department offices.32 The ESCM account funds the Bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations, 
which is tasked with providing U.S. diplomatic and consular missions overseas with secure, 
functional, and resilient facilities and serving as the single manager for nonmilitary U.S. 
Government real property abroad.33  
For FY2022, the Administration requested approximately $6.06 billion for the diplomatic security 
accounts: $4.08 billion for WSP and $1.98 billion for ESCM. The Administration’s request was 
less than the funding Congress provided for these accounts in FY2021 (see
 Table 3).  
                                                 
27 Joint Explanatory Statement Accompanying Division K of P.L. 117-103, p. 7. 
28 Ibid., p. 10. 
29 Ibid., p. 10 and Section 7064(c) of Division K of P.L. 117-103. 
30 Joint Explanatory Statement Accompanying Division K of P.L. 117-103, pp. 7, 9; U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1, p. 47 
31 Ibid., p. 9.  
32 U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, p. 20. 
33 U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1, pp. 2, 321. 
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Table 3. Diplomatic Security Annual Appropriations, FY2020-FY2022 
(In billions of current U.S. dollars, includes OCO and Emergency Supplemental funds) 
% Change, 
FY21 
% Change, FY21 
Enacted 
FY2020 
FY2021 
FY2022 
Enacted to 
FY2022 
FY2022 
to FY22 
Account 
Actual 
Enacted 
Request 
FY22 Request 
House 
Enacted 
Enacted 
Worldwide Security 
4.10  
4.12 
4.08 
-1.1% 
4.08 
3.79 
-8.1% 
Protection 
Embassy Security, 
1.98  
1.95 
1.98 
1.7% 
2.00 
2.10 
7.3% 
Construction, and 
Maintenance  
Diplomatic 
6.08 
6.07 
6.06 
-0.2% 
6.08 
5.89 
-3.1% 
Security (total) 
Sources: FY2022 SFOPS CBJ; H.R. 4373; P.L. 116-260; P.L. 117-103; P.L. 117-128; CRS calculations. 
Notes: Percentage changes may not reflect numbers included in this table due to rounding. Annual 
appropriations data do not reflect available carryover funds.34 
The Administration’s FY2022 WSP-funded priorities included 70 new DS overseas special agent 
positions, which it maintained were “instrumental to reducing overseas staffing gaps and 
mitigating future year retirement trends.”35 The request also sought funding for expanding the 
Assistant Regional Security Officer Investigator (ARSO-I) program to combat visa and passport 
fraud and related human trafficking concerns, among other priorities.36 With regard to ESCM, the 
request called for $2.2 billion in funding (which includes contributions from other agencies with 
personnel assigned abroad that are not part of the State Department’s budget) for the Capital 
Security Cost Sharing and Maintenance Cost Sharing Programs (CSCS/MCS), which fund the 
planning, design, construction, and maintenance of the United States’ overseas diplomatic posts.37  
House Legislation. H.R. 4373 would have appropriated funding for WSP at a level identical to 
the Biden Administration’s request and included slightly more ($12.3 million) funding for 
ESCM.38 H.R. 4373 did not directly address the Administration’s request for additional overseas 
DS special agents. The report accompanying this bill stated that it included the funding the 
Administration required to hire additional State Department personnel more generally.39 Neither 
the bill nor the committee report specifically addressed the proposed ARSO-I expansion. 
                                                 
34 Over the past several years, Congress provided no-year appropriations for both WSP and ESCM, thereby authorizing 
the State Department to indefinitely retain appropriated funds beyond the fiscal year for which they were appropriated. 
As a result, the department has carried over balances of unexpired, unobligated WSP and ESCM funds each year that it 
is authorized to obligate for purposes including multiyear construction projects and unexpected security contingencies. 
35 U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1, p. 51.  
36 U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1, pp. 304-305. For background on ARSO-I, 
see U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Diplomatic Security, “The Investigative Global Force Multiplier: Diplomatic 
Security Service’s Assistant Regional Security Officer-Investigators,” May 27, 2020, at https://www.state.gov/the-
investigative-global-force-multiplier-diplomatic-security-services-assistant-regional-security-officer-investigators/.  
37 Ibid., p. 322-323. 
38 The Biden Administration’s precise requests for WSP and ESCM, as provided in the State Department’s FY2022 
Congressional Budget Justification, total $4,075,899,000 and $1,983,149,000, respectively. The funding totals in the 
House bill for WSP and ESCM total $4,075,899,000 and $1,995,449,000, respectively. 
39 House Committee on Appropriations, 
State Foreign Operations, and Related Programs Appropriations Bill, 2022, p. 
4. 
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However, the bill appeared to include sufficient funding to expand the program, as the overall 
funding it would have appropriated for WSP was equal to the Administration’s request. Regarding 
the ESCM account, the House bill would have provided around $2.12 billion for the CSCS/MCS 
programs (when factoring in funding from other agencies), or nearly 4% less than the Biden 
Administration’s request.40 The House bill would have also appropriated $12.3 million more than 
the Biden Administration requested in overall funding for ESCM. Had it been enacted, the bill 
would have thus included more funding than requested for other ESCM-funded priorities.41  
Consolidated and Supplemental Appropriations (including AUSAA). The FY2022 
consolidated appropriations law (P.L. 117-103) and the AUSAA (P.L. 117-128) included a 
combined $3.79 billion for WSP and $2.10 billion for ESCM, for a total of approximately $5.89 
billion in diplomatic security funding. This aggregate funding level is nearly 3% less than the 
Biden Administration’s request. The funding Congress provided for WSP (around $290 million, 
or 7%, less than the Administration’s request) may partially reflect reduced Afghanistan-related 
WSP costs, for which the Administration requested nearly $580 million prior to the U.S. 
withdrawal from that country.42 P.L. 117-103 also included funding for the WSP Human 
Resources component equal to the Biden Administration’s request. The law therefore likely 
provided sufficient resources for the State Department to bring on the 70 additional DS special 
agents it requested pending consultation with Congress (see the “Consolidated and Supplemental 
Appropriations” analysis under the 
“Diplomatic Programs” subsection of this report for more 
detail regarding these consultation requirements). P.L. 117-103 did not specifically address 
ARSO-I expansion but appears to have included sufficient resources for the State Department to 
expand the program. 
P.L. 117-103 and P.L. 117-128 also appropriated $2.10 billion in funding for ESCM, which is 6% 
more than the Biden Administration’s overall request. P.L. 117-103 provided resources for the 
CSCS/MCS program and other programs funded through ESCM, including repair and 
construction projects that the State Department maintains will address “critical maintenance 
requirements at existing legacy facilities,” at levels identical to the Biden Administration’s 
request.43   
Assessed Contributions to International Organizations and 
Peacekeeping Missions  
The Contributions to International Organizations (CIO) account is the funding vehicle for the 
United States’ payments of its assessed contributions (membership dues) to 43 international 
organizations. These include the United Nations (U.N.) and organizations in the U.N. system 
(among them the World Health Organization, or WHO), inter-American organizations such as the 
Organization of American States, and regional organizations including the North Atlantic Treaty 
                                                 
40 The Biden Administration’s request totaled $2,204,997,000. If enacted, the House bill would provide 
$2,124,000,000. See 
Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1, p. 323, and House Committee on Appropriations, 
State Foreign Operations, and Related Programs Appropriations Bill, 2022, p. 24. 
41 Such priorities may include the Compound Security Upgrade Program, which funds comprehensive security upgrade 
projects at U.S. overseas posts and anti-ram vehicle barrier installations, among other projects. See U.S. Department of 
State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1, p. 323. 
42 U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1, p. 307. 
43 Ibid., p. 324 and Joint Explanatory Statement Accompanying Division K of P.L. 117-103, p. 16. While the State 
Department’s budget request includes a transfer of around $42.5 million from the Consular and Border Security 
Programs account to CSCS/MCS, Congress does not address this proposed transfer in the consolidated appropriations 
law. 
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Organization (NATO).44 Separately, the United States pays its assessed contributions to U.N. 
peacekeeping missions through the Contributions for International Peacekeeping Activities 
(CIPA) account.45 U.S. funding to international organizations is also provided through various 
SFOPS multilateral assistance accounts (see 
“Foreign Operations Highlights,” below).  
The Biden Administration requested a combined $3.592 billion for these accounts for FY2022. 
This funding level would have totaled a 21% increase from the funds Congress appropriated for 
FY
2021. Table 4 shows recent funding levels for each account. 
Table 4. U.S. Payments of Assessments to International Organizations and 
Peacekeeping Missions, FY2020-FY2022 
(In billions of current U.S. dollars; includes OCO funds) 
% Change, 
% Change, 
FY21 
FY21 Enacted 
Enacted to 
FY2020 
FY2021 
FY2022 
to FY22 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY22 
Account 
Actual 
Enacted 
Request 
Request 
House 
Enacted 
Enacted 
Contributions to International 
1.47 
1.51 
1.66 
10.4% 
1.66 
1.66 
10.4% 
Organizations 
Contributions for International 
1.53 
1.46 
1.93 
32.4% 
1.93 
1.50 
2.9% 
Peacekeeping Activities 
Total 
3.00 
2.97 
3.59 
21.2% 
3.59 
3.16 
6.7% 
Sources: FY2022 SFOPS CBJ; H.R. 4373; P.L. 116-260; P.L. 117-103; CRS calculations. 
Notes: Percentage changes may not reflect numbers included in this table due to rounding. 
The Biden Administration maintained that its CIO request sought funding for “international 
programs and organizations whose missions substantially advance U.S. foreign policy interests.” 
The Administration further noted that the request reflected its expectation that international 
organizations should “rein in costs,” improve their efficiency and effectiveness, enhance their 
accountability and transparency, and share funding burdens more equitably among member 
states.46 Among other priorities, the request asked for $75 million for payments to the U.N. 
Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).47 The Administration also 
requested authority for the United States to rejoin UNESCO.48 The Trump Administration 
withdrew the United States from UNESCO in 2018.49 
For CIPA, the Biden Administration asserted that its FY2022 request advanced its intent to fully 
fund the United States’ U.N. peacekeeping commitments and pay down over $900 million in 
arrears that had accumulated over the past four years (this figure excluded previously 
accumulated arrears).50 The accumulation of such arrears owed in part to the United Nations’ 
                                                 
44 U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, pp. 48-49. 
45 Ibid., pp. 51-53. 
46 U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, pp. 48-49. 
47 U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1, p. 363 
48 For additional background, see CRS In Focus IF10354, 
United Nations Issues: U.S. Funding to the U.N. System, by 
Luisa Blanchfield.  
49 For more information, see CRS Insight IN10802, 
U.S. Withdrawal from the United Nations Educational, Scientific 
and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), by Luisa Blanchfield.  
50 For an overview of U.N. peacekeeping arrears accumulated prior to 2017, see CRS In Focus IF10597, 
United 
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current assessment of the U.S. share of U.N. peacekeeping budgets, which totals 27.89%. This 
exceeds the 25% congressional cap on payments for this purpose that Congress has kept in place 
since 1994 due to concerns that U.S. assessments are too high.51 The Biden Administration’s 
request asked for $300 million to begin paying down such arrears; the Administration added its 
intention to pay down the remainder in FY2023.52 The request also proposed language that, if 
enacted, would have authorized the State Department to make funds appropriated in FY2022 
available for U.N. peacekeeping missions above the aforementioned 25% statutory cap.53 
House Legislation. The House bill would have funded CIO and CIPA at the levels the Biden 
Administration requested. While the bill sought to provide an appropriation for CIO that was 
equal to the Biden Administration’s request, which incorporated requested funding for UNESCO, 
the bill did not include the waiver authority the Biden Administration called for that would have 
allowed the United States to rejoin the organization. The House bill included both the $300 
million the Biden Administration requested for the payment of peacekeeping arrears and 
requested legislative language to allow the State Department to make funds available for U.N. 
peacekeeping missions in excess of the 25% statutory cap.54  
Consolidated Appropriation. Like the House bill, P.L. 117-103 funded CIO at a level equal to 
the Biden Administration’s $1.66 billion request. While this included the funding the Biden 
Administration sought for UNESCO, the bill did not include the aforementioned waiver authority 
the Biden Administration said was necessary for the United States to rejoin UNESCO.
 The law 
also appropriated $1.50 billion for CIPA, or about 22% less than both the Biden Administration’s 
request and the amount the House bill included. While P.L. 117-103 provided nearly 3% more for 
CIPA than Congress appropriated in FY2021, this increase may not be sufficient for the Biden 
Administration to use $300 million of such funding to begin paying peacekeeping arrears, as 
envisioned in the Administration’s request. The law also did not include the authorizing language 
the Administration requested that would have allowed the State Department to fund U.N. 
peacekeeping missions at levels exceeding the 25% statutory cap on the U.S. share of U.N. 
peacekeeping mission budgets.  
Foreign Operations Highlights 
The SFOPS appropriation’s foreign operations accounts comprise the majority of U.S. foreign 
assistance included in the international affairs budget; the remainder is enacted in the agriculture 
appropriation, which provides funding for the Food for Peace Act, Title II and McGovern-Dole 
                                                 
Nations Issues: U.S. Funding of U.N. Peacekeeping, by Luisa Blanchfield. 
51 Over the years, the gap between the actual U.S. assessment and the cap led to funding shortfalls. The State 
Department and Congress often covered these shortfalls by raising the cap for limited periods and allowing for the 
application of U.N. peacekeeping credits (excess U.N. funds from previous missions) to fund outstanding U.S. 
balances. For several years, these actions allowed the United States to pay its peacekeeping assessments in full. 
However, since FY2017 Congress has declined to raise the cap, and in mid-2017, the Trump Administration allowed 
for the application of peacekeeping credits up to, but not beyond, the 25% cap—which has led to the accumulation of 
about $920 million in U.S. arrears from FY2017 to FY2020. For more information, see CRS In Focus IF10597, 
United 
Nations Issues: U.S. Funding of U.N. Peacekeeping, by Luisa Blanchfield. See also U.S. Department of State, 
Congressional Budget Justification, p. 51.  
52 U.S. Department of State, 
FY2022 Budget Request, slide presentation, p. 42.  
53 SFOPS CBJ for FY2022 Appendix 1, p. 397. See also 22 U.S.C. §287e note.  
54 House Committee on Appropriations, 
State Foreign Operations, and Related Programs Appropriations Bill, 2022, p. 
6. 
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International Food for Education and Child Nutrition Programs.55 The Biden Administration’s 
initial FY2022 request for Foreign Operations accounts totaled $44.307 billion. The total foreign 
assistance request, including the food assistance provided in the agriculture appropriation, totaled 
$46.107 billion, which represented an 11% increase from FY2021-enacted nonemergency funds 
(i.e., base and OCO) and a nearly 20% decrease from total enacted FY2021 appropriations (i.e., 
base, OCO, and emergency funds to address COVID-19 abroad, certain assistance for Sudan, and 
humanitarian assistance for Afghanistan and Afghan refugees).  
On March 2, 2022, the Administration requested supplemental foreign operations funding to 
support needs related to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, as well as the continued COVID-19 
response abroad.56 For Ukraine, the request included a total of $5.0 billion, of which $2.75 billion 
was proposed for humanitarian assistance, $1.75 billion for economic assistance, and $500 
million for security assistance.57 For COVID-19, the Administration requested a total of $4.25 
billion in additional foreign operations funding, of which $3.50 billion was for certain global 
health initiatives and $750 million for humanitarian assistance. On April 28, 2022, the 
Administration requested additional supplemental foreign operations funding related to Ukraine 
and U.S. allies and partners in the surrounding region. Of the requested funds, $14.76 billion was 
for foreign operations accounts, of which $8.76 billion was proposed for economic assistance, 
$4.5 billion for security assistance, $850 million for humanitarian assistance, and $650 million for 
multilateral assistance. With the supplemental requests, the Administration’s FY2022 foreign 
operations request totaled $68.32 billion, and the total foreign assistance request was $70.12 
billion, or 22.2% higher than the total FY2021-enacted funding level. Se
e Table 5 for a more 
detailed breakdown. 
Table 5. Foreign Assistance, by Type, FY2020-FY2022 
(In millions of current U.S. dollars) 
% Change, 
% Change, 
FY2021 
FY2021 
Total 
Total 
Enacted 
Enacted 
FY2021 
vs. Total 
vs. 
FY2020 
Enacted 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
Type 
Actual 
Totala 
Request 
Request 
House 
Enacted 
Enacted 
USAID Administration 
1,766.05 
1,752.45 
1,862.65 
6.3% 
1,790.62 
2,021.15 
15.3% 
Global Health Programs 
9,559.95 
13,195.95 
13,550.95 
2.7% 
10,641.45 
9,830.00 
-25.5% 
Non-health Development Assistance 
8,119.08 
17,797.04 
20,412.11 
14.7% 
9,272.00 
20,215.19 
13.6% 
(includes Treasury Technical Assistance) 
Humanitarian Assistanceb 
10,460.46 
11,467.46 
14,447.46 
26.0% 
10,267.46 
20,496.85 
78.7% 
Independent Agencies 
1,474.00 
1,393.50 
1,393.50 
0.0% 
1,430.00 
1,404.50 
0.8% 
Security Assistance 
9,013.95 
9,004.03 
14,183.89 
57.5% 
9,034.03 
14,079.35 
56.4% 
                                                 
55 For more on international food assistance programs, see CRS Report R45422, 
U.S. International Food Assistance: 
An Overview, by Alyssa R. Casey and Emily M. Morgenstern. 
56 See letter from OMB Acting Director Shalanda Young to Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, at 
https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/COVID-and-Ukraine-Supplemental-Funding-Request-
Pelosi.pdf. 
57 For more on the Ukraine portion of the Administration’s supplemental request, see CRS Insight IN11877, 
Supplemental Funding for Ukraine: Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs (SFOPS), by 
Emily M. Morgenstern. 
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% Change, 
% Change, 
FY2021 
FY2021 
Total 
Total 
Enacted 
Enacted 
FY2021 
vs. Total 
vs. 
FY2020 
Enacted 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
Type 
Actual 
Totala 
Request 
Request 
House 
Enacted 
Enacted 
Multilateral Assistance 
2,049.78 
2,620.82 
4,280.13 
63.3% 
4,098.56 
3,024.46 
15.4% 
Export Promotionc 
59.16 
159.00 
-13.61 
-108.6% 
223.80 
323.80 
103.6% 
Foreign Assistance Total 
42,502.42 
57,390.25 
70,117.09 
22.2% 
46,757.92 
71,395.30 
24.4% 
Sources: SFOPS CBJ for FY2022; H.R. 4373; H.R. 4356; P.L. 117-103; P.L. 117-128; supplemental requests 
submitted to Congress on March 2, 2022, and April 28, 2022; CRS calculations. 
a.  FY2021 enacted total includes emergency funding to address COVID-19 abroad, select assistance for Sudan, 
and humanitarian assistance for Afghanistan and Afghan refugees. 
b.  Includes Food for Peace Act, Title II funds appropriated in annual Agriculture appropriations.  
c.  Export Promotion numbers are negative when anticipated receipts and other offsetting col ections are 
expected to exceed appropriations, resulting in a net gain to the Treasury.  
House Legislation. The House FY2022 legislation provided a total of $46.76 billion for foreign 
assistance (includes food aid in the Agriculture appropriation, H.R. 4356). This represented a 
nearly 19% increase from FY2021-enacted nonemergency funds, a 14% decrease from total 
FY2021-enacted funding, and a 5% increase over the Biden Administration’s initial request. 
Continuing Resolutions. The first continuing resolution for FY2022 (P.L. 117-43), which 
expired on December 3, 2021, included a total of $1.89 billion in emergency funding to address 
humanitarian needs in Afghanistan and to assist Afghan refugees, among other objectives. The 
funds were provided through three accounts: International Disaster Assistance (IDA, $400 
million), Migration and Refugee Assistance (MRA, $415 million), and Emergency Refugee and 
Migration Assistance (ERMA, $1.08 billion). The second continuing resolution for FY2022 (P.L. 
117-70), which expired on February 18, 2022, included $1.20 billion in supplemental ERMA 
funds “for support for Operation Allies Welcome and related efforts by the Department of State, 
including additional relocations of individuals at risk as a result of the situation in Afghanistan 
and related expenses.” The CR also included a provision that required the Director of the Office 
of Management and Budget to provide a report to Congress no later than January 15, 2022, on 
Operation Allies Welcome that includes “a strategy and transition plan leading to the conclusion” 
of the operation, among other details. 
Consolidated Appropriation. P.L. 117-103 provided $40.95 billion in base foreign operations 
funding and $9.74 billion in supplemental funds to address the crisis in Ukraine, bringing the total 
foreign operations funding for FY2022 to nearly $50.69 billion, and foreign assistance funding to 
$52.76 billion. This foreign assistance funding level represents an 8% decrease from total 
FY2021 foreign assistance funding. However, when comparing nonemergency funding, FY2022-
enacted funding represents a 4% increase from the FY2021 funding level. The largest increase 
among the foreign assistance funding categories, by percentage, was for export assistance, for 
which FY2022-enacted appropriations are more than double the FY2021 funding. The largest 
funding reduction when comparing FY2021- and FY2022-enacted appropriations was for non-
health development assistance accounts, which decreased by nearly 36% in total. 
AUSAA. P.L. 117-128
 provided a total of $18.63 billion in supplemental funds for Ukraine and 
countries affected by the crisis in Ukraine. The measure brings total enacted FY2022 foreign 
operations funding to $69.32 billion, and foreign assistance funding to $71.40 billion. The foreign 
assistance funding level represents a 24.4% increase from FY2021 total enacted funding. 
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Cross-Cutting Issues 
The Biden Administration’s budget request articulated certain global priorities for FY2022. These 
included responding to climate change through bilateral and multilateral efforts, addressing the 
first- and second-order effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, and combating rising 
authoritarianism. 
Climate Change 
The Biden Administration identified climate change response as a top priority. Multilaterally, the 
Biden Administration proposed a $625 million contribution to the Green Climate Fund, which 
would be the first U.S. contribution since FY2017. The request also included $300 million for the 
Clean Technology Fund and $100 million for Multilateral Climate Change Adaptation Funds. 
Bilaterally, the Administration asserted that the request “increas[es] investments in systemic 
change that promotes adaptation resilience, renewable energy, and sustainable landscapes.”58 The 
Administration included climate considerations in all regional-specific requests as well as certain 
sector-specific requests such as those for food security and gender.59 The budget request also 
incorporated climate-related priorities into independent agency requests, such as those for the 
Peace Corps, Millennium Challenge Corporation, and the U.S. African Development Foundation. 
House Legislation. The House bill, H.R. 4373, provided funds for both multilateral and bilateral 
efforts to combat climate change. The bill included $1.60 billion for the Green Climate Fund and 
$200 million for the Clean Technology Fund. The report designated additional funds for climate 
efforts and directed agencies to incorporate climate into foreign assistance activities. For 
example, it listed climate change as a key issue in a number of regions, including the Indo-
Pacific, Central America, and sub-Saharan Africa. The committee further directed that funds be 
made available for “climate change integration at the activity level at USAID, especially to 
increase the technical expertise of USAID staff related to climate change mitigation and 
adaptation.” 
Consolidated Appropriation. P.L. 117-103 included selected funding for climate change efforts 
but not at the levels requested by the Administration or proposed in the House legislation. The bill 
included $125 million for a Clean Technology Fund and $149 million for the Global Environment 
Facility. The bill also directed that $185 million be made available for sustainable landscapes 
programs, $270 million for adaptation programs, and $260 million for clean energy programs, 
among other environmental initiatives. As in prior year appropriations, the legislation did not 
include a contribution to the Green Climate Fund.60 
COVID-19 
The FY2022 request proposed funds to address the first-order effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, 
including global health and humanitarian needs; second- and third-order effects, such as food 
security, education, and economic challenges; and long-term pandemic preparedness efforts. The 
proposed investments for COVID-19 response included, among others, 
                                                 
58 SFOPS CBJ for FY2022, p. 80. 
59 Ibid. 
60 For more detailed information on U.S. funding for international climate programs, see CRS In Focus IF12036, 
U.S. 
International Climate Finance: FY2023, by Richard K. Lattanzio. 
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  $995 million for Global Health Security to “enhance the global COVID response 
and strengthen global health security”;61 
  humanitarian assistance funds through the International Disaster Assistance 
(IDA) and Migration and Refugee Assistance (MRA) accounts to aid the most 
vulnerable populations and maintain “global response capacity” in the wake of 
COVID-19;62 
  Development Assistance (DA) education funds to “address the global learning 
crisis and respond to the impact of COVID-19 on education”;63 and 
  Economic Support Fund (ESF) monies to help regions recover from the 
economic effects of COVID-19.64 
The Administration’s supplemental request for COVID-19, submitted on March 2, 2022, included 
an additional $4.25 billion for foreign operations accounts. According to the request, $3.5 billion 
would have been for global health programs—including $1.8 billion for the U.S. Global VAX 
initiative and $1.7 billion for other COVID-19 global health interventions (e.g., therapeutics and 
supplies)—and $750 million would have been for humanitarian assistance, including the 
provision of emergency food assistance. 
House Legislation. The report accompanying the House measure (H.Rept. 117-84) noted that the 
bill 
makes a strong commitment to a global health architecture where every country has the 
systems  and  policies  to  proactively  respond  to,  and  mitigate,  emerging  health  threats  ... 
[and]  provides  a  renewed  commitment  to  development  and  the  economic  security  of 
countries seeking to recover from the ravages of the pandemic including closed schools, 
lost livelihoods, and rising levels of gender-based violence and discrimination. 
The measure and accompanying report provided $1 billion for Global Health Security; directed 
the USAID Administrator to address learning loss due to COVID-19, including through 
expanding access to distance learning materials and technology; and recommended that USAID 
design COVID-19-sensitive water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) programs, among other 
provisions. 
Consolidated Appropriation. The draft consolidated appropriation included a division with 
supplemental funding for COVID-19, including for select SFOPS accounts. However, the 
division was removed from the bill prior to its enactment.65 The enacted bill, P.L. 117-103, 
included directives related to pandemics and other infectious disease outbreaks but did not 
designate specific funding levels for such purposes, with the exception of the Emergency Reserve 
Fund, which may receive up to $100 million.  
Rising Authoritarianism 
The Biden Administration’s budget proposed funds to address rising authoritarianism and 
democratic backsliding, including in the context of COVID-19. A proposed $100 million for 
                                                 
61 Ibid., p. 77. 
62 Ibid., pp. 84 and 95. 
63 Ibid., p. 81. 
64 Ibid., pp. 87-88. 
65 Laura Weiss, David Lerman, Lindsey McPherson, et al., “Pandemic aid bill pulled as House aims to wrap up 
omnibus,” 
Roll Call, March 9, 2022. 
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USAID’s Bureau for Democracy, Development, and Innovation (DDI)—which was level when 
compared to the FY2021 appropriation—was to elevate “anti-corruption, human rights, and 
countering authoritarianism as strategic and programmatic priorities.”66 The Administration also 
included these priorities in some of its regional requests. The Assistance to Europe, Eurasia, and 
Central Asia proposal for Europe and Eurasia, for example, was “focused on defending 
democracy, rule of law, advancing human rights and gender equality, fighting corruption, and 
countering authoritarianism.”67 
House Legislation. The House report accompanying H.R. 4373 asserted its support for the 
Administration’s “commitment to strengthening and preserving democracies worldwide.” It 
provided funds for the Democracy Fund at the level the Administration requested—which would 
have been even with the FY2021-enacted level—and provided additional funds for multilateral 
efforts, such as $4.5 million for the Organization of American States (OAS) Fund for 
Strengthening Democracy and $3.5 million for the U.N. Democracy Fund. 
Consolidated Appropriation. The FY2022 consolidated legislation included a total of $340 
million for the Democracy Fund, a 17% increase over the FY2021-enacted level and the 
Administration’s request for FY2022. The bill also directed that not less than $2.60 billion be 
made available for democracy programs in FY2022, an increase of $183 million from the amount 
designated in FY2021. The Joint Explanatory Statement accompanying the legislation also 
designated $4.5 million in the OAS Fund for Strengthening Democracy and $3.5 million for the 
U.N. Democracy Fund, consistent with the House-passed legislation. 
Foreign Operations Sectors 
Global Health Programs (GHP)68 
Most of the global health funding in the USAID and the Department of State budgets is used for 
the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and infectious disease control 
(se
e Table 6).69 The Biden Administration initially requested $10.05 billion in total for global 
health programs in FY2022, a nearly 24% decrease from total FY2021 Global Health Programs 
account funding but a 9% increase when FY2021 emergency funds are excluded. Funding for 
global health security programs would have increased by $825 million, or more than 429%, from 
FY2021 enacted nonemergency funding. The increase appeared to reflect the Administration’s 
interest in pandemic preparedness efforts in light of the COVID-19 pandemic.70 The Biden 
Administration announced in January 2021 that it would reengage with WHO, and included “the 
repayment of arrears” to WHO in the President’s FY2022 discretionary funding request 
summary.71 These actions reversed the Trump Administration’s decision to halt U.S. funding to 
the WHO and “terminate” the U.S. relationship with the organization.72  
                                                 
66 Ibid., p. 91. 
67 Ibid., p. 92. 
68 Prepared by Sara Tharakan, Analyst in Global Health and International Development, and Tiaji Salaam-Blyther, 
Specialist in Global Health. 
69 For more information, see CRS In Focus IF11758, 
U.S. Global Health Funding: FY2017-FY2022 Request, by Tiaji 
Salaam-Blyther. Congress also appropriates global health funding to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 
all of which is focused on infectious disease prevention and control.  
70 SFOPS CBJ for FY2022.  
71 White House, 
The President’s FY2022 Discretionary Budget Request, April 9, 2021, p. 26. 
72 For more on the Trump Administration’s decisions regarding WHO, as well as the withdrawal process, see CRS 
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The Biden Administration also  
  reversed the Mexico City Policy which, when invoked by previous presidents, 
required nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) receiving U.S. foreign 
assistance for family planning programs to certify that they would not promote or 
perform abortion as a method of family planning, even with non-U.S. funds; and  
  revoked the Protecting Life in Global Health Assistance policy, which expanded 
the Mexico City Policy on family planning and reproductive health (FP/RH) 
funding to include all U.S. global health assistance.73 
Additionally, the FY2022 budget request sought funding increases for FP/RH programs (+$26 
million), as well as for maternal and child health (+$24.5 million).74 
As noted above, the Administration submitted to Congress a supplemental funding request in 
March 2022 to address COVID-19 abroad, including $3.5 billion for global health programs. This 
brought the total FY2022 request for the Global Health Programs account to $13.55 billion, or 
about 2.7% more than the FY2021 total enacted funding. 
Table 6. Global Health Appropriations, FY2018-FY2022 
(In millions of current U.S. dollars) 
FY2018 
FY2019 
FY2020 
FY2021 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
 
Enacted 
Enacted 
Enacted 
Enacted 
Request 
House 
Enacted 
HIV/AIDS 
4,320.0 
4,370.0 
4,370.0 
4,370.0 
4,370.0 
4,520.0 
4,390.0 
Global Fund 
1,350.0 
1,350.0 
1,560.0 
1,560.0 
1,560.0 
1,560.0 
1,560.0 
Total, State-GHP 
5,670.0 
5,720.0 
5,930.0 
5,930.0 
5,930.0 
6,080.0 
5,950.0 
HIV/AIDS 
330.0 
330.0 
330.0 
330.0 
330.0 
330.0 
330.0 
Tuberculosis 
261.0 
302.0 
310.0 
319.0 
319.0 
469.0 
371.1 
Malaria 
755.0 
755.0 
770.0 
770.0 
770.0 
820.0 
775.0 
MCH 
829.5 
835.0 
851.0 
855.0 
879.5 
880.0 
890.0 
Nutrition 
125.0 
145.0 
150.0 
150.0 
150.0 
160.0 
155.0 
Vulnerable 
23.0 
24.0 
25.0 
25.0 
25.0 
30.0 
27.5 
Children 
FP/RH 
524.0 
524.0 
524.0 
524.0 
550.0 
760.0 
524.0 
NTDs 
100.0 
102.5 
102.5 
102.5 
102.5 
112.5 
107.5 
GHS 
72.5 
100.0 
100.0 
190.0 
995.0 
1,000.0 
700.0 
Total, USAID-
3,020.0 
3,117.5 
3,162.5 
3,265.5 
4,121.0 
4,561.5 
3,880.0 
GHP 
Emergency GHP 
 
 
 
4,000.0 
3,500.0 
 
 
Total, GHP 
8,690.0 
8,837.5 
9,092.5 
13,195.5 
13,551.0 
10,641.5 
9,830.0 
                                                 
Report R46575, 
U.S. Withdrawal from the World Health Organization: Process and Implications, coordinated by Tiaji 
Salaam-Blyther. 
73 For more information on the MCP see CRS Report R41360, 
Abortion and Family Planning-Related Provisions in 
U.S. Foreign Assistance Law and Policy, by Luisa Blanchfield. 
74 SFOPS CBJ for FY2022.  
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Sources: Created by Tiaji Salaam-Blyther, Specialist in Global Health, from appropriations legislation and 
engagement with USAID legislative affairs staff. 
Notes: FY2021 emergency supplemental funding to combat COVID-19 abroad was enacted in Title IX of P.L. 
116-260, but subaccount allocations were not specified. Table does not include funding for global health from 
other appropriations vehicles (e.g., CDC funding for global health activities appropriated through Labor-HHS). 
MCH = Maternal and Child Health; FP/RH = Family Planning and Reproductive Health; NTDs = Neglected 
Tropical Diseases; GHS = Global Health Security. 
House Legislation. The House measure, H.R. 4373, provided $10.64 billion in global health 
funding for FY2022. The bill provided level or increased funding for each global health 
subaccount when compared with the Biden Administration’s initial request. Compared with the 
Administration’s initial request, the bill provided the largest increase (in dollar amount) to Family 
Planning/Reproductive Health programs and emphasized global health security and health 
systems strengthening. 
Consolidated Appropriation. The consolidated appropriation, P.L. 117-103, provided $9.83 
billion in global health funding for FY2022 but did not include the emergency COVID-19 
funding requested by the Administration, which Congress continues to debate (see 
“Outlook” section, below). The enacted funding represents an increase of $634.5 million (7%) compared 
with FY2021-enacted nonemergency funding (i.e., excluding the $4 billion in FY2021 
supplemental funding to combat COVID-19). The legislation provided level or increased funding 
for each global health subaccount compared with FY2021-enacted levels. However, compared 
with the President’s amended request, the legislation decreased funding to FP/RH (-5%) and 
Global Health Security (-30%), and total GHP funding by more than 27%. 
Humanitarian Assistance75 
The U.S. government supports global efforts to assist people affected by conflict and natural 
disasters, consistently providing about one-third of total global humanitarian assistance. Such 
assistance is generally appropriated through global humanitarian accounts administered through 
the State Department and USAID, including the Migration and Refugee Assistance (MRA), 
Emergency Refugee and Migration Assistance (ERMA), and International Disaster Assistance 
(IDA) accounts in the SFOPS appropriation, and the Food for Peace, Title II account (FFP) in the 
Agriculture appropriation. Continuing a long-standing trend across Administrations, Congress has 
supported global humanitarian efforts at appropriation levels well above the budget request (see 
Figure 3).  
Data show that the scope of global humanitarian and displacement crises has significantly 
worsened in the past 25 years. 76 According to the United Nations, the projected numbers of those 
displaced or requiring humanitarian assistance in 2022 are the highest on record, in part due to the 
ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, which continues to exacerbate drivers of humanitarian need.77 The 
U.N. 2022 global humanitarian appeal for $41.00 billion was the highest ever. Enacted FY2021 
                                                 
75 Prepared by Rhoda Margesson, Specialist in International Humanitarian Policy. 
76 The New Humanitarian, “Change in the Humanitarian Sector, in Numbers,” September 9, 2020.  
77 The United Nations estimates that in 2022, more than 274 million people will require humanitarian assistance and 
protection and over 8.4 million persons will be forcibly displaced, the highest number on record. In addition, natural 
disasters and deepening environmental vulnerability due to climate change affect millions of people every year. U.N. 
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 
Global Humanitarian Overview 2022, December 2, 2021. U.N. 
humanitarian funding appeals are administered through UNOCHA and bring many aid organizations together to 
coordinate a response to major humanitarian crises and disasters worldwide, usually in the form of an appeal for funds 
through a collaborative plan. U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, 
Mid-Year Trends Report, November 2021 (latest 
available). 
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U.S. humanitarian funding totaled $11.467 billion, which was also a record high. This total 
included emergency supplemental funds from P.L. 117-31 (comprising $500 million for ERMA 
and $100 million for MRA to address humanitarian needs in Afghanistan and to assist Afghan 
refugees) and at least $800 million in FFP funds and $500 million in MRA funds provided for a 
broad range of needs through the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARPA, P.L. 117-2).78 
The Biden Administration’s initial budget request for FY2022 called for $10.10 billion in 
humanitarian assistance to support displaced and vulnerable persons worldwide, or about 12% 
below the FY2021-enacted total. The request included $3.85 billion for MRA, $100 million for 
ERMA, $4.68 billion for IDA, and $1.57 billion for FFP. It would have shifted $170.0 million 
from FFP to IDA’s Emergency Food Security Program in a stated effort to increase flexibility in 
addressing urgent and growing food insecurity. 
The Administration’s supplemental request for aid to Ukraine and assistance to address COVID-
19 abroad sought $3.50 billion in additional FY2022 humanitarian assistance ($2.75 billion for 
Ukraine, $750 million for COVID-19), including the provision of emergency food assistance. 
This supplemental request brought the Administration’s total FY2022 humanitarian assistance 
request to $13.60 billion. 
The Administration’s second supplemental request for aid to Ukraine and countries affected by 
the war in Ukraine sought $850 million in additional FY2022 humanitarian assistance, including 
the provision of emergency food assistance, bringing the Administration’s total FY2022 
humanitarian request to $14.45 billion. 
Figure 3. U.S. Humanitarian Assistance, Requested and Enacted,  
by Account (FY2014-FY2022) 
 
Sources: Annual SFOPS CBJs, P.L. 117-103, and P.L. 117-128. 
                                                 
78 Section 10003 of ARPA also included $3.09 billion under the Economic Support Fund authority “to be made 
available to the United States Agency for International Development to prevent, prepare for, and respond to 
coronavirus, which shall include support for international disaster relief, rehabilitation, and reconstruction, for 
health activities, and to meet emergency food security needs.” It is unclear if any of these funds are to be administered 
through the global humanitarian accounts. 
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Notes: MRA = Migration and Refugee Assistance, ERMA = Emergency Refugee and Migration Assistance, IDA = 
International Disaster Assistance, IHA = International Humanitarian Assistance, FFP = Food for Peace. FY2020 
enacted funding includes supplemental COVID-19 relief appropriations. FY2021-enacted funding includes 
emergency supplemental funds from P.L. 117-31 and ARPA. Figure produced with Edward Col ins-Chase, Analyst 
in Foreign Policy.  
*An IHA consolidated account was proposed under the Trump Administration. Congress did not enact the 
proposed funding reductions or changes to the humanitarian account structure. 
House Legislation. The House measure, H.R. 4373, would have provided $8.53 billion in 
humanitarian funding through the MRA, ERMA, and IDA accounts. The House Agriculture 
appropriations bill, H.R. 4356, would have provided $1.74 billion in FFP funding, bringing the 
total for humanitarian assistance to nearly $10.27 billion for FY2022, which represented an 
increase of close to 2% over the Administration’s initial request. 
Continuing Resolutions. The first FY2022 CR, the Extending Government Funding and 
Delivering Emergency Assistance Act (P.L. 117-43), provided an additional $1.89 billion in 
humanitarian assistance to address needs in, and assist refugees from, Afghanistan.79 A second 
continuing resolution, the Further Extending Government Funding Act (P.L. 117-70), included an 
additional $1.20 billion in humanitarian assistance through the ERMA account primarily to 
support relocation and resettlement activities related to the evacuation of Afghans from 
Afghanistan.80 
 
Consolidated Appropriation. The FY2022 full year appropriation, P.L. 117-103, included $6.82 
billion in regular SFOPS humanitarian assistance accounts ($3.90 billion for MRA, $0.01 million 
for ERMA, $2.91 billion for IDA) and $1.74 billion in FFP, for a total of $8.56 billion in enduring 
humanitarian assistance appropriations. In addition, Congress appropriated $4.15 billion in 
humanitarian assistance for the Ukraine response81 (close to a 34% increase over the 
Administration’s Ukraine supplemental request for humanitarian assistance). This amount 
included $4.05 billion for SFOPS accounts, ($1.4 billion for MRA and $2.65 billion for IDA), 
and $100 million for FFP. 
AUSAA. The supplemental measure, P.L. 117-128, included nearly $4.70 billion for SFOPS 
humanitarian assistance accounts ($4.35 billion for IDA and $350 million for MRA). 
In sum, Congress has appropriated nearly $20.50 billion for the humanitarian assistance accounts 
for FY2022. This represents a near 79% increase in total enacted humanitarian assistance 
compared with FY2021, largely due to the additional funding provided for the humanitarian 
responses in Afghanistan and Ukraine. Excluding supplemental humanitarian funding, Congress 
has appropriated a total of $8.56 billion for humanitarian assistance in FY2022, an 11% decrease 
from enacted FY2021 funding levels and approximately 15% below the Administration’s initial 
FY2022 budget request.  
Security Assistance 
The Biden Administration’s initial request included $9.18 billion in security assistance, a 2% 
increase when compared with FY2021 enacted levels (see
 Figure 4). As in past years, Foreign 
Military Financing (FMF) accounted for the largest share of security assistance funding. The 
largest proposed increase was to the International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement 
                                                 
79 P.L. 117-43, Division C, Title IV included $400 million for IDA, $415 million for MRA, and $1,076.1 million for 
ERMA. 
80 Account details for the supplemental funding in the continuing resolutions is provided in the 
“State Department 
Operations and Related Agency Funding Highlights” and 
“Foreign Operations Highlights” sections of this report. 
81 See Division N of P.L. 117-103—the Ukraine Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2022. 
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Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
(INCLE) account. The Administration asserted that the 10% proposed increase in INCLE would 
largely help address the crime and violence that contribute to irregular migration to the United 
States, particularly from Central America. According to the request, $570 million, or 37% of 
proposed INCLE funding, would be allocated to these efforts in Central America. Other security 
assistance priorities identified in the request are countering terrorist threats, including those posed 
by the Islamic State (IS) and Al Qaeda; supporting implementation of the Global Fragility Act of 
2019 (Div. J, Title V of P.L. 116-94); and countering malign influences of China, Russia, and 
Iran. The Administration also sought to bolster regional stability in the Middle East through 
Peacekeeping Operations (PKO) support for the Multinational Force and Observers mission in the 
Sinai. 
The Administration’s March 2022 
supplemental budget request, included an 
Figure 4. Security Assistance by Account, 
additional $500 million in FMF funds to 
FY2020-FY2022 
support Ukraine, bringing the total FY2022 
(In billions of current U.S. dollars) 
security assistance request to $9.68 billion. 
The second supplemental request in April 
2022 included $4.5 billion in security 
assistance accounts to support Ukraine and 
the region, of which $4.0 billion would be for 
FMF, $400 million for INCLE, and $100 
million for NADR. This request brought the 
total FY2022 security assistance request to 
$14.18 billion. 
House Legislation. H.R. 4373 would have 
provided $9.0 billion in security assistance, 
representing a less than 1% increase from 
FY2021-enacted levels and a nearly 2% 
decrease from the Administration’s original 
request.  
Consolidated Appropriation. For FY2022, 
Congress has appropriated a total of $9.58 
billion in security assistance through P.L. 117-
 
103: $8.90 billion in enduring funds and $680 
Sources: FY2022 SFOPS CBJ; P.L. 116-260; P.L. 117-
million in supplemental funding for Ukraine 
103; P.L. 117-128. 
($650 million in FMF and $30 million in 
Notes: FMF = Foreign Military Financing; IMET = 
International Military Education and Training; INCLE 
INCLE). The base security assistance funding 
= International Narcotics Control and Law 
represents a 1% decrease in funding 
Enforcement; NADR = Nonproliferation, Anti-
compared with FY2021 levels and a 3% 
terrorism, Demining and Related Programs; PKO = 
decrease from the President’s request. With 
Peacekeeping Operations. 
emergency funding, the total amount appropriated for security assistance represents a 6% increase 
over FY2021 funding and 1% less than the President’s total request. 
AUSAA. This second supplemental measure met the Administration’s April 2022 request for $4.5 
billion in security assistance for Ukraine and U.S. partners in the region. The bill included the 
requested $4.0 billion for FMF, $400 million for INCLE, and $100 million for NADR. These 
supplemental funds bring total FY2022 security assistance appropriations to $14.079 billion, an 
increase of 56% over total enacted FY2021 levels. 
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Development Assistance, Export Promotion, and Related Assistance 
The remaining third of the FY2022 foreign operations request proposed to allocate funds to non-
health development sectors, independent agencies, multilateral assistance, and export promotion 
agencies. 
Development Sectors 
The Biden Administration’s request for FY2022 did not specify dollar amounts for many non-
health development sectors but offered detail on program priorities within some sectors. For 
example, the Administration highlighted investments in gender equality and equity, including 
$200 million in proposed funds for the Gender Equity and Equality Action Fund, which the Biden 
Administration named as the successor to the Trump Administration’s Women’s Global 
Development and Prosperity (W-GDP) Fund. Other key program areas included climate change 
and the environment, democracy promotion and countering the rise of global authoritarianism, 
and food security—in particular the Feed the Future Initiative. 
House Legislation. When compared with FY2021-enacted levels, the House measure (H.R. 
4373) would have provided level or increased funding for most non-health development sectors 
in FY2022 (se
e Table 7). The education sector would have seen a decrease of $35 million (3%). 
The largest increase was proposed for environmental programs, which would have seen an 
increase of $303.5 million (31%) over prior year appropriations. 
Table 7. Select Development Sectors, FY2020-FY2022 
(In millions of current U.S. dollars) 
FY2020 
FY2021 
FY2022 
FY2022 
Sector 
Enacted 
Enacted 
House 
Enacted 
Democracy Programs (excluding NED) 
2,400.0 
2,417.0 
2,517.0 
2,600.0 
Education (basic and higher) 
1,110.0 
1,235.0 
1,200.0 
1,200.0 
Food Security 
1,005.6 
1,010.6 
1,100.0 
1,010.6 
Environment 
906.7 
986.7 
1,290.2 
1,295.0 
Water and Sanitation 
450.0 
450.0 
475.0 
475.0 
Gender 
330.0 
560.0 
617.0 
560.0 
Trafficking in Persons 
67.0 
99.0 
106.4 
106.4 
Reconciliation Programs 
30.0 
25.0 
25.0 
25.0 
Micro and Small Enterprise 
265.0 
265.0 
265.0 
265.0 
Sources: P.L. 116-94; P.L. 116-260; H.R. 4373; P.L. 117-103
. 
Notes: NED = National Endowment for Democracy. 
Consolidated Appropriation. In the FY2022 consolidated appropriation, Congress largely 
provided level or increased funding for the non-health development sectors. The one exception 
was for education, which decreased by 3% compared with FY2021. Sectors receiving funding 
increases compared to prior-year funding include environmental programs (31%), Democracy 
Programs (7.6%), Water and Sanitation (5.5%), and Trafficking in Persons (8%). 
Congressional Research Service  
 
24 
 link to page 21 
Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
Independent Agencies 
The Administration’s request for FY2022 would have maintained level funding for the Peace 
Corps, Inter-American Foundation (IAF), U.S. African Development Foundation (USADF), and 
the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) when compared with FY2021-enacted levels. The 
House measure, H.R. 4373, provided increases to the Peace Corps (5%), IAF (17%), and USADF 
(30%), and maintained level funding for MCC for FY2022 when compared with FY2021-enacted 
levels. The FY2022 consolidated appropriation, P.L. 117-103, keeps level funding for both the 
Peace Corps and MCC compared with FY2021 but increases funding for the IAF (11%) and 
USADF (21%). 
Multilateral Assistance 
As part of its stated efforts to strengthen U.S. multilateral engagement, the Administration’s 
budget request included increases to multilateral assistance for FY2022 when compared with total 
enacted funding for FY2021. The largest proposed increase was to the International Development 
Association, a World Bank agency that provides grants and loans to the world’s least developed 
countries; it would have been a nearly 43% increase over the FY2021-enacted level. As stated 
above, the request also proposed funds for climate efforts including the Green Climate Fund (see 
“Climate Change”). 
House Legislation. H.R. 4373 would have provided a total of $4.1 billion for multilateral 
assistance accounts for FY2022, representing a 13% increase from the Biden Administration’s 
request. The House measure emphasized the Green Climate Fund, providing $1.60 billion for 
FY2022, a 156% increase from the Administration’s proposed $625 million. The House bill did 
not increase funding for the International Development Association, instead appropriating level 
funding when compared to FY2021. 
Consolidated Appropriation. P.L. 117-103 provided a total of $2.37 billion for multilateral 
assistance accounts for FY2022, which represented an increase of 16% compared with enduring 
(nonemergency) funds for such accounts for FY2021 and a decrease of 35% compared with the 
Administration’s request. Compared with FY2021 enduring funds, all multilateral accounts 
received level or increased funding with the International Fund for Agriculture and Development 
(IFAD) receiving the largest increase (32%). 
Export Promotion 
For FY2022, the Administration proposed increases to the Export-Import (Ex-Im) Bank and the 
U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) operating accounts to support agency 
priorities such as climate change response, clean energy, and sustainable infrastructure. In both 
instances, the Administration asserted that offsetting collections would reduce the agencies’ 
budget burden. The Administration stated its expectation that the Ex-Im Bank would return funds 
to the Treasury at the end of the fiscal year, as it had in previous fiscal years. Similarly, while the 
Administration stated that it does not expect the DFC to be entirely budget neutral, it asserted that 
collections would reduce the agency’s budget burden to $128.4 million with an estimated $472.4 
million in offsetting collections. 
House Legislation. H.R. 4373 largely met the Administration’s proposed funding for the Ex-Im 
Bank and DFC. An exception was the Ex-Im Bank’s program budget, which would have seen a 
decrease of $5 million (50%) from the Administration’s proposal. The House legislation provided 
increased funding for Ex-Im Bank and DFC when compared with the FY2021-enacted levels. 
Congressional Research Service  
 
25 
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 Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
Consolidated Appropriation.
Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
Consolidated Appropriation. In P.L. 117-103, Congress maintained level funding for the Ex-Im 
Bank and U.S. Trade and Development Agency in FY2022 but increased funding for the DFC by 
65% compared with FY2021 appropriations and by 148% compared with the Administration’s 
request. As in prior years, the Ex-Im Bank is expected to return funds to the Treasury at the end of 
the fiscal year. 
Regional Assistance 
Similar to previous Administrations, the Biden Administration did not propose regional funding 
that captured all appropriations accounts. For example, humanitarian funding was proposed and 
provided for in what are often referred to as “global” accounts, wherein funding is allocated on a 
needs basis throughout the fiscal year for which it is appropriated. As such, the entirety of foreign 
assistance funding for a particular country or region is assessed fully only after the close of a 
fiscal year. 
However, the Administration did propose regional funding for certain accounts. These included 
Global Health Programs (GHP); DA; ESF; Assistance to Europe, Eurasia, and Central Asia 
(AEECA); and all five security assistance accounts. For FY2022, the Administration initially 
proposed increases in all regions with the exception of Europe and Eurasia, which would have 
seen a nearly 4% decrease in funding when compared with FY2020 actual levels (se
e Figure 5).82 
The greatest proposed increase was for funding to the Western Hemisphere, largely to help the 
region address the root causes of migration to the United States. 
Figure 5. Regional Assistance, FY2020 vs. FY2022 Request 
 
Sources: FY2022 SFOPS Congressional Budget Justification; CRS calculations for FY2020.  
Notes: FY2020 is the most recent “actual” data available. Accounts included = GHP, DA, ESF, AEECA, INCLE, 
NADR, PKO, IMET, and FMF. FY2020 Actual includes COVID-19 emergency funds. 
House Legislation. The House legislation and accompanying report did not provide 
comprehensive regional allocations, but did specify assistance levels for several countries and 
regions. For example, the measure directed that up to $860.6 million could have been made 
                                                 
82 FY2020 actuals are used as a comparison because comprehensive country- and regional-specific levels are not 
provided in annual appropriations measures. FY2021 total funding levels for most countries have not been reported. 
Congressional Research Service  
 
26 
Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
available for assistance to Central American countries.83 The legislation also directed that not less 
than $3.3 billion be made available for Israel, not less than $1.4 billion for Egypt, not less than 
$481.5 million for assistance for Ukraine, and not less than $132.0 million for assistance for 
Georgia, among other designations. 
Consolidated Appropriation. The consolidated appropriation, P.L. 117-103, also did not include 
comprehensive country- and region-specific allocations. As in prior year appropriations, though, 
the measure did include directives for some countries and regions. For example, the law specified 
that not less than $3.3 billion shall be made available for Israel, not less than $1.6 billion for the 
Indo-Pacific Strategy, and not less than $1.4 billion for Egypt, among other designations. As 
noted above, Division N of the bill also provides supplemental appropriations for Ukraine, 
including $6.65 billion in foreign operations accounts. These funds were not allocated by country 
or region but are likely to increase aid to Europe and Eurasia in FY2022 significantly relative to 
FY2021. 
AUSAA. As with the first supplemental appropriations for Ukraine (Division N of P.L. 117-103), 
the AUSAA (P.L. 117-128) does not include country-specific allocations but could increase aid to 
Europe and Eurasia in FY2022 significantly. 
Outlook 
Although Congress enacted a full year SFOPS appropriation for FY2022 in March 2022, and the 
FY2023 budget process is underway, appropriations for FY2022 may not be complete. Members 
continue to debate the possible need for additional funding in the remaining months of FY2022, 
primarily for the following purposes:  
Ukraine. The Russian invasion of Ukraine prompted the Administration to ask Congress for 
$19.76 billion in additional FY2022 SFOPS funding to address military, economic, and 
humanitarian needs in Ukraine and neighboring counties. Congress included a combined total of 
$25.75 billion in emergency SFOPS funds in the FY2022 consolidated appropriations bill and the 
AUSAA for this purpose. As the fighting in Ukraine continues, and the refugee and food security 
crisis worsens, Congress may consider further supplemental appropriations to provide additional 
aid to the region.  
COVID-19. The Administration’s first supplemental budget request included $4.25 billion in 
additional FY2022 SFOPS funds to address COVID-19. A draft version of the consolidated bill 
included emergency COVID-19 funding within SFOPS accounts, but the funding was removed 
from the legislation during final negotiations. Members reportedly are still negotiating a potential 
COVID-19 emergency supplemental appropriations bill for FY2022.84  
U.S. Diplomatic Presence in Afghanistan. The withdrawal of U.S. military and diplomatic 
personnel from Afghanistan in August 2021 occurred after the State Department submitted its 
initial FY2022 budget request to Congress and the House of Representatives passed its SFOPS 
bill. For FY2022, the Biden Administration requested approximately $579.6 million for 
diplomatic security-related priorities in Afghanistan, including the deployment of weaponry on 
                                                 
83 Including Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama. Funds may also be 
programmed through the Central America Regional Security Initiative (CARSI). 
84 Lindsay McPherson, “Bipartisan talks on pandemic aid offsets underway in Senate,” Congressional Quarterly, March 
22, 2022, available at https://plus.cq.com/doc/news-6491010?1&srcpage=home&srcsec=cqn. 
Congressional Research Service  
 
27 
Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
new Embassy Air helicopters and armored vehicle replacements.85 The Administration also 
requested an additional $70.8 million for diplomatic programs in Afghanistan, including mission 
staffing and operations, along with information technology costs.86 Although the United States 
and Qatar reached an agreement to establish a U.S. Interests Section located within the Qatari 
Embassy in Kabul, it does not appear that this agreement involves the assignment of U.S. 
personnel to the Interests Section.87 It remains unclear when, or if, the United States will 
reestablish a larger diplomatic presence in Afghanistan, and what the funding requirements to 
sustain such a presence may look like.
                                                 
85 SFOPS CBJ for FY2022 Appendix 1, p. 307. 
86 Ibid., p. 154. 
87 Humeyra Pamuk and Jonathan Landay, “Blinken says Qatar to act as U.S. diplomatic representative in Afghanistan,” 
Reuters, November 12, 2021.  
Congressional Research Service  
 
28 
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Appendix A. SFOPS Funding, by Account 
Table A-1. Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs Appropriations: FY2021-FY2022 
(In millions of U.S. dollars; numbers in parentheses are the portion of the account totals designated as OCO or emergency funds) 
% 
% 
Change 
FY2022 
FY2022 
Change  FY2021 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
CR 2 
Consolid. 
FY2022  Enacted 
FY2021 
FY2022 
House-
Senate 
CR 1 
P.L. 
P.L. 117-
AUSAA 
FY2022 
Req. to 
to 
Total 
Req., 
Passed 
Intro 
P.L. 117-
117-70,  103, Div. K,  P.L. 117-
Total 
FY2022  FY2022 
 
Enacteda 
Totalb 
H.R. 4373  S. 3075c  43, Div. C  Div. B 
Nd 
128 
Enactede  Enacted  Enacted 
Title I. State, Broadcasting & Related 
17,494.19 
18,349.10  18,202.98  17,573.12 
276.90 
80.30 
17,367.48 
(314.00) 
18,038.68 
-2% 
+3% 
Agencies, TOTAL 
(4,561.54) 
(154.00) 
(825.20) 
Administration of Foreign Affairs, Subtotal 
13,152.79 
13,371.07  13,204.50  12,599.84 
276.90 
80.30 
12,715.11 
(314.00) 
13,386.31 
0% 
+3% 
(3,759.31) 
(129.00) 
(800.20) 
Diplomatic Programs 
9,374.01 
9,490.67 
9,476.98 
9,040.67 
 
44.30 
9,303.79 
(190.00) 
9,538.09 
0% 
+2% 
(2,430.12) 
(125.00) 
(359.30) 
of which Worldwide Security Protection 
4,120.90 
4,075.90 
4,075.90 
3,625.90 
 
 
3,788.20 
 
3,788.20 
-7% 
-8% 
(2,226.12) 
Consular and Border Security Programs 
(300.00) 
320.00 
320.00 
  
 
 
0.00 
 
0.00 
-100% 
-100% 
Capital Investment Fund 
250.00 
448.88 
275.00 
448.88 
 
 
300.00 
(10.00) 
310.00 
-31% 
+24% 
(10.00) 
Office of Inspector Gener
alf 
145.73 
146.36 
146.36 
 
 
 
135.46 
(4.00) 
139.46 
-5% 
-4% 
(54.90) 
(4.00) 
(8.00) 
Educational & Cultural Exchanges 
740.30 
741.30 
750.00 
748.96 
 
 
753.00 
 
753.00 
+2% 
+2% 
Representation Expenses 
7.42 
7.42 
7.42 
7.42 
 
 
7.42 
 
7.42 
0% 
0% 
Protection of Foreign Missions & Officials 
30.89 
30.89 
30.89 
30.89 
 
 
30.89 
 
30.89 
0% 
0% 
Embassy Security, Construction & 
1,950.45 
1,983.15 
1,995.45 
1,983.15 
 
 
1,983.15 
(110.00) 
2,093.15 
+6% 
+7% 
Maintenance 
(824.29) 
(110.00) 
CRS-29 
 link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41 
 
% 
% 
Change 
FY2022 
FY2022 
Change  FY2021 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
CR 2 
Consolid. 
FY2022  Enacted 
FY2021 
FY2022 
House-
Senate 
CR 1 
P.L. 
P.L. 117-
AUSAA 
FY2022 
Req. to 
to 
Total 
Req., 
Passed 
Intro 
P.L. 117-
117-70,  103, Div. K,  P.L. 117-
Total 
FY2022  FY2022 
 
Enacteda 
Totalb 
H.R. 4373  S. 3075c  43, Div. C  Div. B 
Nd 
128 
Enactede  Enacted  Enacted 
of which Worldwide Security Upgrades 
1,181.39 
1,132.43 
1,144.73 
1,132.43 
 
 
1,132.43 
 
1,132.43 
0% 
-4% 
(824.29) 
Emergency-Diplomatic & Consular 
7.89 
8.89 
8.89 
8.89 
276.90 
36.00 
7.89 
 
320.79  +3510% 
+3968% 
Services 
Repatriation Loans 
2.50 
1.30 
1.30 
1.30 
 
 
1.30 
 
1.30 
0% 
-48% 
Payment American Institute Taiwan 
31.96 
32.58 
32.58 
32.58 
 
 
32.58 
 
32.58 
0% 
+2% 
International Chancery Center 
2.74 
0.74 
0.74 
0.74 
 
 
0.74 
 
0.74 
0% 
-73% 
Sudan Claims 
150.00 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
n.a. 
n.a. 
(150.00) 
Foreign Service Retirement (mandatory) 
158.90 
158.90 
158.90 
158.90 
 
 
158.9 
 
158.9 
0% 
0% 
International Organizations, Subtotal 
2,962.24 
3,591.54 
3,591.54 
3,491.54 
 
 
3,161.54 
 
3,161.54 
-12% 
+7% 
(802.23) 
Contributions to International 
1,505.93 
1,662.93 
1,662.93 
1,662.93 
 
 
1,662.93 
 
1,662.93 
0% 
+10% 
Organizations 
(96.24) 
Contributions to International 
1,456.31 
1,928.61 
1,928.61 
1,828.61 
 
 
1,498.61 
 
1,498.61 
-22% 
+3% 
Peacekeeping 
(705.99) 
International Commissions, Subtotal 
176.62 
176.62 
186.62 
181.37 
 
 
180.85 
 
180.85 
+2% 
+2% 
(Function 300) 
International Boundary/U.S. Mexico 
98.77 
98.77 
108.77 
103.52 
 
 
103.00 
 
103.00 
+4% 
+4% 
American Sections 
15.01 
15.01 
15.01 
15.01 
 
 
15.01 
 
15.01 
0% 
0% 
International Fisheries 
62.85 
62.85 
62.85 
62.85 
 
 
62.85 
 
62.85 
0% 
0% 
Agency for Global Media, Subtotal 
802.96 
810.40 
818.85 
885.40 
 
 
885.00 
 
885.00 
+9% 
+10% 
(25.00) 
(25.00) 
CRS-30 
 link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41 
 
% 
% 
Change 
FY2022 
FY2022 
Change  FY2021 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
CR 2 
Consolid. 
FY2022  Enacted 
FY2021 
FY2022 
House-
Senate 
CR 1 
P.L. 
P.L. 117-
AUSAA 
FY2022 
Req. to 
to 
Total 
Req., 
Passed 
Intro 
P.L. 117-
117-70,  103, Div. K,  P.L. 117-
Total 
FY2022  FY2022 
 
Enacteda 
Totalb 
H.R. 4373  S. 3075c  43, Div. C  Div. B 
Nd 
128 
Enactede  Enacted  Enacted 
Broadcasting Operations 
793.26 
800.70 
809.15 
870.70 
 
 
875.30 
 
875.30 
+9% 
+10% 
(25.00) 
(25.00) 
Capital Improvements 
9.70 
9.70 
9.70 
14.70 
 
 
9.70 
 
9.70 
0% 
0% 
Related Programs, Subtotal 
385.28 
385.17 
387.17 
400.67 
 
 
410.67 
 
410.67 
+7% 
+7% 
Asia Foundation 
20.00 
20.00 
20.00 
21.50 
 
 
21.50 
 
21.50 
+8% 
+8% 
U.S. Institute of Peace 
45.00 
45.00 
45.00 
54.00 
 
 
54.00 
 
54.00 
+20% 
+20% 
Center for Middle East-West Dialogue 
0.25 
0.18 
0.18 
0.18 
 
 
0.18 
 
0.18 
0% 
-28% 
Eisenhower Exchange Programs 
0.21 
0.17 
0.17 
0.17 
 
 
0.17 
 
0.17 
0% 
-19% 
Israeli-Arab Scholarship Program 
0.12 
0.12 
0.12 
0.12 
 
 
0.12 
 
0.12 
0% 
0% 
East-West Center 
19.70 
19.70 
19.70 
19.70 
 
 
19.70 
 
19.70 
0% 
0% 
Leadership Institute for Transatlantic 
 
 
2.00 
  
 
 
 
 
 
n.a. 
n.a. 
Engagement 
National Endowment for Democracy 
300.00 
300.00 
300.00 
305.00 
 
 
315.00 
 
315.00 
+5% 
+5% 
Other Commissions, Subtotal 
14.30 
14.30 
14.30 
14.30 
 
 
14.30 
 
14.30 
0% 
0% 
Preservation of America’s Heritage 
0.64 
0.64 
0.64 
0.64 
 
 
0.64 
 
0.64 
0% 
0% 
Abroad 
International Religious Freedom 
4.50 
4.50 
4.50 
4.50 
 
 
4.50 
 
4.50 
0% 
0% 
Security & Cooperation in Europe 
2.91 
2.91 
2.91 
2.91 
 
 
2.91 
 
2.91 
0% 
0% 
Cong.-Exec. Commission on People’s 
2.25 
2.25 
2.25 
2.25 
 
 
2.25 
 
2.25 
0% 
0% 
Republic of China 
U.S.-China Economic and Security Review 
4.00 
4.00 
4.00 
4.00 
 
 
4.00 
 
4.00 
0% 
0% 
CRS-31 
 link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41 
 
% 
% 
Change 
FY2022 
FY2022 
Change  FY2021 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
CR 2 
Consolid. 
FY2022  Enacted 
FY2021 
FY2022 
House-
Senate 
CR 1 
P.L. 
P.L. 117-
AUSAA 
FY2022 
Req. to 
to 
Total 
Req., 
Passed 
Intro 
P.L. 117-
117-70,  103, Div. K,  P.L. 117-
Total 
FY2022  FY2022 
 
Enacteda 
Totalb 
H.R. 4373  S. 3075c  43, Div. C  Div. B 
Nd 
128 
Enactede  Enacted  Enacted 
Foreign Operations, TOTAL 
54,620.25 
68,316.97  44,772.92  46,317.43 
1,891.10  1,200.00 
47,595.20  (18,632.00) 
69,318.30 
+1% 
+27% 
(19,733.58)  (24,010.00) 
(6,646.00) 
(28,369.10) 
Title II. Administration of Foreign 
1,752.45 
1,862.65 
1,790.62 
1,976.35 
0.00 
0.00 
2,003.15 
(18.00) 
2,021.15 
+9% 
+15% 
Assistance 
(41.00) 
(29.00) 
(47.00) 
USAID Operating Expenses 
1,418.75 
1,527.95 
1,455.92 
1,635.95 
 
 
1,660.95 
(17.00) 
1,677.95 
+10% 
+18% 
(41.00) 
(25.00) 
(42.00) 
USAID Capital Investment Fund 
258.20 
258.20 
258.20 
258.20 
 
 
258.20 
 
258.20 
0% 
0% 
USAID Inspector General 
75.50 
76.50 
76.50 
82.20 
 
 
84.00 
(1.00) 
85.00 
+11% 
+13% 
(4.00) 
(5.00) 
Title III. Bilateral Assistance 
41,083.95 
48,003.91  29,625.91  29,248.31 
1,891.10  1,200.00 
33,314.44  (13,464.00) 
49,869.54 
+4% 
+21% 
(18,210.46)  (18,360.00) 
(5,937.00) 
(22,492.10) 
Global Health Programs 
13,195.95 
13,550.95  10,641.45  10,353.95 
 
 
9,830.00 
 
9,830.00 
-27% 
-26% 
(4,000.00) 
(3,500.00) 
of which USAID 
7,265.95 
3,870.95 
4,561.45 
4,423.95 
 
 
3,880.00 
 
3,880.00 
0% 
-47% 
(4,000.00) 
of which State 
5,930.00 
6,180.00 
6,080.00 
5,930.00 
 
 
5,950.00 
 
5,950.00 
-4% 
0% 
Development Assistance 
3,500.00 
4,075.10 
4,075.10 
4,075.10 
 
 
4,140.49 
 
4,140.49 
+2% 
+18% 
International Disaster Assistance 
4,395.36 
7,782.36 
4,682.36 
4,682.36 
400.00 
 
6,555.45 
(4,348.00) 
11,303.45 
+43% 
+157% 
(1,914.04) 
(3,200.00) 
(2,650.00) 
(7,398.00) 
Transition Initiatives 
92.04 
92.04 
92.04 
107.04 
 
 
200.00 
 
200.00 
+117% 
+117% 
(120.00) 
(120.00) 
Complex Crises Fund 
30.00 
60.00 
40.00 
60.00 
 
 
60.00 
 
60.00 
0% 
+100% 
CRS-32 
 link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41 
 
% 
% 
Change 
FY2022 
FY2022 
Change  FY2021 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
CR 2 
Consolid. 
FY2022  Enacted 
FY2021 
FY2022 
House-
Senate 
CR 1 
P.L. 
P.L. 117-
AUSAA 
FY2022 
Req. to 
to 
Total 
Req., 
Passed 
Intro 
P.L. 117-
117-70,  103, Div. K,  P.L. 117-
Total 
FY2022  FY2022 
 
Enacteda 
Totalb 
H.R. 4373  S. 3075c  43, Div. C  Div. B 
Nd 
128 
Enactede  Enacted  Enacted 
Economic Support Fund 
12,526.96 
14,770.23 
3,635.23 
3,480.13 
 
 
4,746.00 
(8,766.00) 
13,512.00 
-9% 
+8% 
(9,375.00)  (10,510.00)d 
(647.00) 
(9,413.00) 
Democracy Fund 
290.70 
290.70 
290.70 
340.70 
 
 
340.70 
 
340.70 
+17% 
+17% 
Assistance for Europe, Eurasia, and 
770.33 
788.93 
788.93 
788.93 
 
 
1,620.00 
 
1,620.00 
+105% 
+110% 
Central Asia 
(1,120.00) 
(1,120.00) 
Migration & Refugee Assistance 
4,032.00 
4,995.00 
3,845.00 
3,845.00 
415.00 
 
4,312.19 
(350.00) 
5,077.19 
+2% 
+26% 
(2,301.42) 
(1,150.00) 
(1,400.00) 
(2,165.00) 
Emergency Refugee & Migration Assistance 
500.10 
0.10 
0.10 
0.10 
1,076.10  1,200.00 
0.10 
 
2,276.20  +2.3 mil% 
+355% 
(500.00) 
(2,276.10) 
Independent Agencies, Subtotal 
1,393.50 
1,393.50 
1,430.00 
1,410.00 
 
 
1,404.50 
 
1,404.50 
+1% 
+1% 
Peace Corps 
410.50 
410.50 
430.50 
410.50 
 
 
410.50 
 
410.50 
0% 
0% 
Mil ennium Challenge Corporation 
912.00 
912.00 
912.00 
912.00 
 
 
912.00 
 
912.00 
0% 
0% 
Inter-American Foundation 
38.00 
38.00 
44.50 
44.50 
 
 
42.00 
 
42.00 
+11% 
+11% 
U.S. African Development Foundation 
33.00 
33.00 
43.00 
43.00 
 
 
40.00 
 
40.00 
+21% 
+21% 
Department of the Treasury, Subtotal 
357.00 
105.00 
105.00 
105.00 
 
 
105.00 
 
105.00 
0% 
-71% 
(120.00) 
International Affairs Technical Assistance 
33.00 
38.00 
38.00 
38.00 
 
 
38.00 
 
38.00 
0% 
+15% 
Debt Restructuring 
324.00 
67.00 
67.00 
67.00 
 
 
67.00 
 
67.00 
0% 
-79% 
(120.00) 
Title IV. International Security Assistance 
9,004.03 
14,183.89 
9,034.03 
9,050.01 
0.00 
0.00 
9,579.35 
(4,500.00) 
14,079.35 
-1% 
+56% 
(902.12) 
(5,000.00) 
(680.00) 
(5,180.00) 
CRS-33 
 link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41 
 
% 
% 
Change 
FY2022 
FY2022 
Change  FY2021 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
CR 2 
Consolid. 
FY2022  Enacted 
FY2021 
FY2022 
House-
Senate 
CR 1 
P.L. 
P.L. 117-
AUSAA 
FY2022 
Req. to 
to 
Total 
Req., 
Passed 
Intro 
P.L. 117-
117-70,  103, Div. K,  P.L. 117-
Total 
FY2022  FY2022 
 
Enacteda 
Totalb 
H.R. 4373  S. 3075c  43, Div. C  Div. B 
Nd 
128 
Enactede  Enacted  Enacted 
International Narcotics Control & Law 
1,385.57 
1,925.74 
1,395.57 
1,388.85 
 
 
1,421.00 
(400.00) 
1,821.00 
-5% 
+31% 
Enforcement 
(400.00) 
(30.00) 
(430.00) 
Nonproliferation, Anti-Terrorism, 
889.25 
1,000.25 
889.25 
907.25 
 
 
900.00 
(100.00) 
1,000.00 
0% 
+12% 
Demining 
(100.00) 
(100.00) 
Peacekeeping Operations 
440.76 
469.46 
460.76 
465.46 
 
 
455.00 
 
455.00 
-3% 
+3% 
(325.21) 
International Military Education & Training 
112.93 
112.93 
112.93 
112.93 
 
 
112.93 
 
112.93 
0% 
0% 
Foreign Military Financing 
6,175.52 
10,675.52 
6,175.52 
6,175.52 
 
 
6,690.42 
(4,000.00) 
10,690.42 
0% 
+73% 
(576.91) 
(4,500.00) 
(650.00) 
(4,650.00) 
Title V. Multilateral Assistance 
2,620.82 
4,280.13 
4,098.56 
4,203.96 
0.00 
0.00 
2,374.46 
(650.00) 
3,024.46 
-29% 
+15% 
(580.00) 
(650.00) 
(650.00) 
International Organizations & Programs 
967.50 
457.10 
477.10 
472.50 
 
 
423.00 
 
423.00 
-7% 
-56% 
(580.00) 
International Bank for Reconstruction and 
206.50 
206.50 
206.50 
206.50 
 
 
206.50 
 
206.50 
0% 
0% 
Development 
European Bank for Reconstruction and 
 
(500.00) 
 
 
 
 
 
(500.00) 
(500.00) 
0% 
n.a. 
Development 
Global Environment Facility 
139.58 
149.29 
149.29 
149.29 
 
 
149.29 
 
149.29 
0% 
+7% 
International Development Association 
1,001.40 
1,427.97 
1,001.40 
1,001.40 
 
 
1,001.40 
 
1,001.40 
-30% 
0% 
Asian Development Fund 
47.40 
53.32 
53.32 
53.32 
 
 
53.23 
 
53.23 
0% 
+13% 
African Development Bank 
54.65 
54.65 
54.65 
54.65 
 
 
54.65 
 
54.65 
0% 
0% 
African Development Fund 
171.30 
211.30 
211.30 
211.30 
 
 
211.30 
 
211.30 
0% 
+23% 
Green Climate Fund 
 
625.00 
1,600.00 
1,450.00 
 
 
0.00 
 
0.00 
-100% 
n.a. 
CRS-34 
 link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41  link to page 41 
 
% 
% 
Change 
FY2022 
FY2022 
Change  FY2021 
FY2022 
FY2022 
FY2022 
CR 2 
Consolid. 
FY2022  Enacted 
FY2021 
FY2022 
House-
Senate 
CR 1 
P.L. 
P.L. 117-
AUSAA 
FY2022 
Req. to 
to 
Total 
Req., 
Passed 
Intro 
P.L. 117-
117-70,  103, Div. K,  P.L. 117-
Total 
FY2022  FY2022 
 
Enacteda 
Totalb 
H.R. 4373  S. 3075c  43, Div. C  Div. B 
Nd 
128 
Enactede  Enacted  Enacted 
Climate Investment Funds/Clean Tech 
 
300.00 
200.00 
450.00 
 
 
125.00 
 
125.00 
-58% 
n.a. 
Fund 
International Monetary Fund 
 
102.00 
102.00 
102.00 
 
 
102.00 
 
102.00 
0% 
n.a. 
Global Agriculture Food Security Program 
 
(150.00) 
 
43.00 
 
 
5.00 
(150.00) 
155.00 
+3% 
n.a. 
(150.00) 
International Fund for Agricultural 
32.50 
43.00 
43.00 
10.00 
 
 
43.00 
 
43.00 
0% 
+32% 
Development 
Title VI. Export Assistance 
159.00 
-13.61 
223.80 
323.80 
0.00 
0.00 
323.80 
 
323.80 
-2479% 
+104% 
Export-Import Bank (net) 
-113.50 
-221.50 
-74.50 
-74.50 
 
 
-74.50 
 
-74.50 
-66% 
-34% 
U.S. Development Finance Corporation 
193.00 
128.39 
218.80 
318.80 
 
 
318.80 
 
318.80 
+148% 
+65% 
(net) 
U.S. Trade & Development Agency 
79.50 
79.50 
79.50 
79.50 
 
 
79.50 
 
79.50 
0% 
0% 
SFOPS Total, Prerescission 
72,114.43 
86,666.07  62,975.90  63,890.54 
2,168.00  1,280.30 
64,962.68  (18,946.00) 
87,356.98 
+1% 
+21% 
(24,295.12)  (24,010.00) 
(6,800.00) 
(29,194.3) 
Rescissions, net 
-530.12 
-535.00 
-575.00  -1,653.64 
0.00 
0.00 
1,903.78 
0.00 
1,903.78 
+256% 
+259% 
(-425.12) 
SFOPS Total, Net of Rescissions 
71,584.31 
86,131.07  62,400.90  62,236.90 
2,168.00  1,280.30 
63,058.90  (18,946.00) 
85,453.20 
-1% 
+19% 
(23,870.00)  (24,010.00) 
(6,800.00) 
(29,194.30) 
Source: SFOPS Congressional Budget Justification for FY2022; P.L. 116-260; P.L. 117-2; P.L. 117-31; H.R. 4373; S. 3075; P.L. 117-43; P.L. 117-70; P.L. 117-103; P.L. 117-
128. 
Notes: Consolid. = Consolidated Appropriations Act. AUSAA = Additional Ukraine Security Assistance Act.
 Figures in parentheses are amount designated as Overseas 
Contingency Operations (OCO) or supplemental emergency funding and are subsumed in the larger account number above them. “Non-emergency” funding includes 
both “base” funding (also referred to as “enduring” or “ongoing” funding in budget documents) and OCO funds. Numbers may not add due to rounding. “n.a.” = not 
applicable. 
CRS-35 
 
a.  Includes emergency funds provided in Title IX of the final FY2021 SFOPS appropriation (P.L. 116-260), the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (P.L. 117-2), and the 
Emergency Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2021 (P.L. 117-31). 
b.  Includes supplemental funds requested by the Administration in March 2022 to address the situation in Ukraine and additional COVID-19-related needs, and an 
additional request made on April 28, 2022. See Letter from OMB Acting Director Shalanda Young;  Addendum A: Detailed Funding Request, Assistance to Ukraine. 
c.  S. 3075 was introduced but was never considered by the Senate SFOPS subcommittee. It is included here only as a reference of potential interest and does not 
indicate a Senate agreement on FY2022 funding levels. 
d.  The supplemental request also asked that this funding be provided with authority to be transferred to the Transition Initiatives, INCLE, NADRA and USAID and 
State Department operational accounts.  
e.  Figures in parenthesis include emergency funding from P.L. 117-43, Div. C; P.L. 117-70, Division B;  P.L. 117-103, Division N; and P.L. 117-128. 
f. 
This includes funding for the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR), which has its own account line in some SFOPS legislation.  
 
 
CRS-36 
 
Appendix B. International Affairs Budget 
The International Affairs budget, or Function 150, includes funding that is not in the Department 
of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs (SFOPS) appropriation; in particular, 
international food assistance programs (Food for Peace Act [FFPA], Title II and McGovern-Dole 
International Food for Education and Child Nutrition programs) are in the Agriculture 
Appropriations, and the Foreign Claim Settlement Commission and the International Trade 
Commission are in the Commerce, Justice, Science appropriations. In addition, the SFOPS 
appropriation measure includes funding for certain international commissions that are not part of 
the International Affairs Function 150 account. 
CRS-37 
 link to page 43 
 
Table B-1. International Affairs Budget, FY2021-FY2022 
(In millions of U.S. dollars; numbers in parentheses are the portion of the account totals designated as OCO or emergency funds) 
FY2022 
FY2022 
% 
FY2022 
FY2022  
 CR 2  
Consolid. 
Change, 
House 
CR 1  
(P.L. 
(P.L. 117-
AUSAA 
FY2022 
FY2021-
FY2021 
FY2022 
(H.R. 
(P.L. 117-
117-70, 
103, Div. 
(P.L. 117-
Enacted 
FY2022 
 
Total 
Req. 
4373) 
43, Div. C) 
Div. B) 
K, M) 
128) 
Total 
Enacted 
State-Foreign Operations, 
71,407.69 
86,131.08 
62,214.68 
2,168.00 
1,280.30 
62,878.05 
18,946.00 
85,272.35 
+19% 
excluding Commissionsa
 
(23,870) 
(24,010.00) 
(6,800.00) 
(29,194.00) 
Commerce-Justice-Science 
105.37 
105.43 
120.93 
0.00 
0.00 
112.43 
0.00 
112.43 
+7% 
     Foreign Claims Settlement     
2.37 
2.43 
2.43 
 
 
2.43 
 
2.43 
+3% 
     Commission 
     Int’l Trade Commission 
103.00 
103.00 
118.5 
 
 
110.00 
 
110.00 
+7% 
Agriculture 
2,770.00 
1,800.11 
1,985.0 
0.00 
0.00 
2,077.00 
0.00 
2,077.00 
-25% 
(800.00) 
(100.00) 
(100.00) 
     FFPA Title II 
2,540.00 
1,570.00 
1,740.0 
 
 
1,840.00 
 
1,840.00 
-28% 
(800.00) 
(100.00) 
(100.00) 
     McGovern-Dole 
230.00 
230.11 
245.0 
 
 
237.00 
 
237.00 
+3% 
Total International Affairs 
74,283.06 
87,860.00 
64,320.21 
2,168.00 
1,280.30 
65,067.48 
18,946.00 
87,461.78 
+18% 
(150) 
(24,520.00) 
(24,010.00) 
(6,900.00) 
(29,394.00) 
Source: SFOPS Congressional Budget Justification for FY2022; March 2 and April 28, 2022, supplemental request letters to Congress from OMB; H.R. 4373; P.L. 117-43; 
P.L. 117-70; P.L. 117-103, P.L. 117-128. 
Notes: Figures in parentheses are amount designated as Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) or supplemental emergency funding and are subsumed in the larger 
account number above them. Non-Emergency funding includes both base funding (also referred to as “enduring” or “ongoing” funding in budget documents) and OCO-
designated funds. Numbers may not add due to rounding. “n.a.” = not applicable. 
a.  Includes mandatory spending from the Foreign Service retirement account and does not align with budget justification figures that count only discretionary spending. 
Excludes funding for international commissions that is appropriated in the SFOPS bil  but part of function 300 of the budget (Natural Resources and Environment), 
not function 150 (International Affairs). 
 
CRS-38 
 Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
Appendix C. International Affairs Components Chart 
Figure C-1. International Affairs Budget Components 
 
Source:
Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
Appendix C. International Affairs Components Chart 
Figure C-1. International Affairs Budget Components 
 
Source: Created by CRS. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Author Information 
 Cory R. Gill 
  Emily M. Morgenstern 
Analyst in Foreign Affairs 
Analyst in Foreign Assistance and Foreign Policy 
    
    
Marian L. Lawson 
   
Section Research Manager     
Congressional Research Service  
 
39 
Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs 
 
 
 
Disclaimer 
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Congressional Research Service  
R46935
 · VERSION 10 · UPDATED 
40