https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO1202/S00366/state-and-usaid-fy-2013-budget.htm
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State and USAID - FY 2013 Budget
Wednesday, 15 February 2012, 12:10 pm
Press Release: US State Department
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Fact Sheet
Washington, DC
February 13,
2012
________________________________________
The
President’s FY 2013 Budget for the Department of State and
the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
strengthens U.S. national security, advances America’s
economic interests, and elevates America’s global
leadership through diplomacy and development. It supports
U.S. businesses, protects Americans at home and abroad, and
stops the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. It
supports our allies and partners, prevents conflict,
promotes democracy, and reflects our core values.
Making
up just 1 percent of the U.S. Government’s overall budget,
the Department of State/USAID budget totals $51.6
billion. The request provides the most cost-efficient
way to ensure diplomats and development experts have the
resources necessary to address complex threats to our
national security and promote our economic
renewal.
Overview of the President’s Budget proposal
for State/USAID
Includes $43.4 billion
for the core budget, which funds the long-term national
security mission of the Department and USAID.
Provides $8.2 billion for Overseas Contingency Operations
(OCO) to support the extraordinary and temporary costs
of civilian-led programs and missions in Iraq, Afghanistan,
and Pakistan.
Supports U.S. engagement with
the government and people of 190 countries across the
globe.
Builds upon our commitment to job
creation at home and economic statecraft by giving our
people the tools to better help American companies compete
overseas; build future trading partners; and facilitate
legitimate travel by U.S. citizens and international
businesspeople and tourists.
Continues to
fulfill the Administration’s commitment to elevating
development as a core pillar of US foreign policy
through targeted investments with measurable returns,
consistent with the principles in the President’s Policy
Directive on Global Development (PPD-6) and the Quadrennial
Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR).
Supports the President’s new commitment to treat 6
million people with HIV/AIDS by the end of
2013.
Proposes a new Middle East and North
Africa Incentive Fund to better position the United
States to quickly respond to dramatic changes in the region
and incentivize reforms.
Devotes resources
where they are most needed to achieve foreign policy and
development goals, reflecting hard trade-offs.
Specifically, this budget:
- Reduces funding
for Europe and Eurasia by 18 percent to reflect the
successful transition of a number of countries to
market-based democracies and eliminates the stand alone
Assistance to Europe, Eurasia, and Central Asia
account.
- Reflects over $100 million in FY
2012-FY 2013 administrative savings through administrative
reforms.
- Enhances consular resources in areas
with high demands for visas, including Brazil and China,
generating tourism in the U.S. and new business
opportunities for American companies. This work will be
funded out of fees generated by the increase in visa
applications.
- Limits the Department’s planned
expansion of the Foreign Service by extending the timeframe
for the goal of a 25 percent increase while focusing modest
staff growth on highest priority programs and
countries.
- Scales back funding for overseas
construction for one year, despite ongoing need for newer,
more secure diplomatic facilities.
- Normalizes
the Development Leadership Initiative (DLI) within USAID
Operating Expenses and does not request additional USAID
Foreign Service positions for FY
2013.
Supports major changes outlined in
the QDDR and PPD-6 by allocating resources to goals with
the greatest impact:
- Reorganizes to
establish three new State Department bureaus focusing on
high-priority issues of counterterrorism and energy, and
reorganizes and renames the Conflict and Stabilization
Operations bureau to better fulfill conflict prevention
missions;
- Continues to expand the application
of science, technology, and innovation in USAID and State
Department programs to ensure the most efficient and
effective use of assistance funding; and
-
Encourages whole-of-government approaches to development in
emerging global markets, especially in the Partnership for
Growth countries of El Salvador, the Philippines, Ghana, and
Tanzania.
Supporting our
Work in Frontline States ($11.9 billion):“Improving
governance, creating economic opportunity, supporting civil
society is vital to solidifying our military gains and
advancing our political and diplomatic goals.”-Secretary Clinton, June
2011
- Iraq: $4.8 billion ($4.0 billion
OCO and $770 million core)
- $2.0 billion
in assistance, including $1.8 billion to fund police
training and military assistance programs transitioned from
the Department of Defense (DoD). Investments in health,
education, and private sector development continue to
decline as these programs transition to the Government of
Iraq.
- $2.7 billion in operations funding
supports the Embassy and three consulates as well as public
outreach programs to strengthen ties with the Iraqi
people.
- This is approximately 10% less than in
FY-12.
Afghanistan: $4.6 billion ($3.2
billion OCO and $1.4 billion core)
$2.5
billion in assistance for counterterrorism-related programs,
economic growth, reconciliation and reintegration, and
capacity building, as well as to support progress in
governance, rule of law, counternarcotics, agriculture,
health, and education.
$2.1 billion supports the
expansion of the diplomatic and interagency presence, the
extraordinary costs of security in a conflict zone, and
public diplomacy programs to build long-lasting bridges with
civil society.
Pakistan: $2.4 billion ($959
million OCO and $1.5 billion
core)
- $2.2 billion in assistance to
strengthen democratic and civil institutions that provide a
bulwark against extremism, and support joint security and
counterterrorism efforts, including $800 million for the
Pakistan Counterinsurgency Capability Fund.
- $197
million supports the U.S. government’s civilian presence,
as well as programs for engagement with civil
society.
Other Frontline States-Related
Costs: $95 million OCO. $95 million provides funding for
additional USAID administrative costs and the cost to
administer the Iraq military assistance
program.
Improving Global Human
and Economic Security ($14.7 billion):“We need to
continue shifting our approach and our thinking from aid to
investment, investments targeted to produce tangible
returns... Wise investors choose their investments
carefully, they manage for risks, and they amplify their
impact by trying to draw even more participants to the
table”-Secretary Clinton, Busan Aid Effectiveness
Forum, November 2011
- $9.3 billion for
critical interventions in health, food security, and climate
change
, as outlined in the PPD as presidential
initiatives:
- $7.9 billion for the Global
Health Initiative (GHI), including $5.4 billion for the
President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). The
budget supports President Obama’s call for an AIDS-free
generation with the goal of providing lifesaving treatment
to six million people globally by the end of 2013. The
request also includes $2.5 billion for USAID managed
programs that build on significant progress to date and
focus resources on key areas where the United States can
make a marked difference in the struggle against pandemics
and disease, including saving mothers and children through
high-impact interventions such as malaria prevention and
child vaccination programs.
- $1.0 billion for the
global hunger and food security initiative, Feed the Future,
to reduce poverty, hunger, and under-nutrition through
sustainable investments in agriculture-focused economic
growth. Together with the Department of Treasury’s
contribution to the Global Agriculture and Food Security
Program, this funding will enable the United States to reach
millions of beneficiaries. The request supports implementing
country-owned strategies that integrate the efforts of
smallholder farmers, the private sector, governments, and
civil society and provides them with the tools to achieve
sustainable results.
- $469.5 million for Global
Climate Change to address the environmental, economic, and
social ramifications of global climate change through
programs that develop clean energy economies; combat
deforestation; and help vulnerable countries build
resilience to withstand extreme weather and rising sea
levels.
- $4.0 billion in humanitarian
assistance
to provide life-saving interventions for
victims of conflict, natural disasters, and persecution,
including $1.4 billion for food aid, $1.7 billion to aid
refugees and conflict victims, and $960 million for disaster
assistance.
- $1.3 billion to support
development investments in the world’s poorest and most
unstable nations
, helping to stabilize societies and
open new markets for U.S.
goods.
Strengthening Partnerships
and Preventing Conflict ($14.6 billion):“American
leadership must be as dynamic as the challenges we face. We
have to be ready to adapt and innovate, and that might mean
leveraging new groups of nations to work on specific
issues.” – Secretary Clinton, Speech on American Global
Leadership at the Center for American Progress, October
2011
- $770 million for a new Middle East
and North Africa Incentive Fund
to respond strategically
to the historical changes taking place across the region.
The Fund will incentivize long-term economic, political and
trade reforms—key pillars of stability—by supporting
governments that demonstrate a commitment to undergo
meaningful change and empower their
people.
- $5.1 billion in military
assistance
to support ongoing partnerships worldwide,
including $3.1 billion for Israel, $1.3 billion for Egypt,
$300 million for Jordan, and approximately $400 million for
70 other strategic partners around the world. This budget
also provides $93.1 million in the International Military
Education and Training account to promote regional stability
and defense capabilities through professional military
education and training.
- $2.7 billion in
economic and transition assistance
to help strengthen
and stabilize developing countries and countries in
transition from conflict. This includes investing in
building governing capacity, reform, and conflict mitigation
in recently independent South Sudan; supporting continued
democratic development in Liberia; post-earthquake
reconstruction in Haiti; and encouraging reform in
Burma.
- $4.1 billion in contributions to
international organizations
(voluntary and assessed) to
support cooperation and security in accordance with U.S.
law:
- $1.5 billion to meet U.S.
obligations to nearly 50 international organizations,
including the United Nations.
- $2.1 billion to
support the US share of international peacekeeping missions,
including critical operations in Somalia, Sudan and Darfur,
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sudan, Haiti, and
Liberia.
- o$535.9 million for voluntary
contributions to international organizations, including UN
Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the UN Development Program
(UNDP), and to peacekeeping missions worldwide in order to
diminish and resolve conflict, enhance partner countries’
capabilities to participate in peacekeeping operations and
address counterterrorism threats, and reform professional
military forces.
- $531.7 million for
anti-terrorism and non-proliferation programs
including
support for programs that counter violent extremism and
terrorist finance, and address the humanitarian threat posed
by landmines and unexploded ordnance.
- $932.5
million for rule of law, police development, and counterdrug
programs
worldwide, including protecting our borders and
repelling the reach of criminal organizations and gang
violence.
- $56.5 million for Conflict
Stabilization Operations
to provide rapid responders to
crisis regions, support conflict prevention efforts,
and stabilize crises and set the conditions for the
transition to long-term peace. These funds will support
overseas deployments and the management of the civilian
response corps for expeditionary
operations.
- $75 million to address emergent
national security challenges
, including through the
existing Complex Crisis Fund ($50 million), and the new
Global Security Contingency Fund ($25 million) introduced in
FY 2012, which integrates Defense and State resources to
address security crises.
- $254 million to
support bilateral international commissions, foreign affairs
foundations and research centers
. This includes academic
institutions such as the Asia Foundation, exchange programs
that include Eisenhower Fellowships, and multilateral
organizations such as the International Fisheries
Commission.
Supporting America’s Global
Presence ($10.4 billion):
“Leading through civilian
power saves lives and money. With the right tools, training,
and leadership, our diplomats and development experts can
defuse crises before they explode and create new
opportunities for economic growth.” – Secretary Clinton, December 2010
- $6.5 billion to support civilians in
embassies, missions, and consulates
around the world
(not including the Frontline States), as well as at our
headquarters in Washington. The request includes the
following priorities:
- $507.4 million
for public diplomacy to engage foreign audiences and win
support for U.S. foreign policy goals, programs that include
engaging with civil society in transition countries such as
Tunisia, Libya, and Egypt (including the Frontline States,
the total Public Diplomacy Request is $541.7
million).
- $1.4 billion in security for
diplomatic personnel, information and facilities at our
worldwide posts.
- $4.5 billion to fund other
requirements, including staffing, operations and programs
for our bureaus, envoys, and more than 270 posts overseas
and in the United States, and funding for 121 new positions
(83 Foreign Service and 38 civil service) in high priority
programs and regions.
- $1.5 billion to
fund USAID operations
, including USAID core staffing and
security requirements in the Frontline States, and funding
for the Implementation and Procurement Reform Initiative of
USAID Forward.
- $1.6 billion for
security-related construction, major facility
rehabilitation, and operational requirements at embassies,
consulates, and missions worldwide
. Supports the
construction of new embassy compounds in Chad, the Hague,
and fit-out of the U.S. Mission’s wing of the new NATO
headquarters nearing completion in Brussels. Also continues
the $270 million capital maintenance cost-sharing program
initiated in FY 2012.
- $83.3 million for
investment in essential modernization of information
technology
through the Department of State’s Capital
Investment Fund.
- $587.0 million for exchange
programs
that give U.S. citizens broad exposure to the
world and help foreign students better understand the United
States. Scholarship programs and cultural exchanges such as
the Fulbright Program advance U.S. national interests by
preparing the next generation of leaders to work together to
tackle global challenges.
- $200 million for
activities including financial oversight work of inspector
general, support of American citizens for repatriation
loans, and the protection of foreign missions and officials
in the United States.
These programs also fund a
wide-range of other activities, including support for the
evacuation of American citizens from nations in
crisis
ENDS