A reminder:
Alexander Joffe
In Palestinian economics, where all the money goes is unclear -- but
where does all the money come from? Which U.S. programs give how much
and who has legislative oversight? Now that Palestinian Authority (PA)
prime minister Salaam Fayyad has announced a plan for September for
unilateral Palestinian statehood, which includes a request for $5
billion over three years -- and presumes that the newly announced
Fatah-Hamas rapprochement does not scuttle all American aid -- the
problem of oversight is all the more pressing.
The fundamental tension between Congress's power of the purse and the
president's obligation to make foreign policy has always been clear.
But so too is the extent to which certifications and waivers by the
Executive blatantly circumvent the express will of Congress and defy its
obligations to advise and obtain consent.
The will of Congress and the empirical reality regarding the
difficulties of the Palestinian Authority and Palestinian society count
for little when successive U.S. presidents waive requirements and
certify compliance regardless of Palestinian performance. And
presidential ability to "reprogram" funds removes Congress even farther
from the equation.
A recent Congressional Research Service study notes that since 2007
the U.S. has contributed $650 million to the Palestinian Authority for
"direct budgetary assistance" and almost $400 million for "security
forces and criminal justice systems" in the West Bank. Almost another $1
billion was directed through the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID) to be "implemented by nongovernmental organizations
in humanitarian assistance, economic development, democratic reform,
improving water access and other infrastructure, health care, education,
and vocational training." Finally, the U.S. is the largest single
contributor to UNRWA and having provided over $230 million in 2010.
USAID is an independent agency whose appropriations requests are made
by the Department of State and submitted to the House and Senate
Appropriations Committees. The Senate Committee on Foreign Relations and
House Committee on Foreign Affairs have oversight responsibility. The
Senate exercises relevant oversight through two subcommittees called
"International Development and Foreign Assistance, Economic Affairs, and
International Environmental Protection," and "Near Eastern and South
and Central Asian Affairs." The House exercises oversight through the
full committee and various subcommittees on "Oversight and
Investigations," "Africa, Global Health, and Human Rights," Middle East
and South Asia," and "Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade."
Economic Support Funds provided by USAID can not go directly
to the Palestinian Authority without a waiver to the Appropriations
Committee from the U.S. president saying that it is in the interest of
U.S. national security to provide them, and and a certification
from the Secretary of State regarding the PA's treasury, payroll and
civil service – all according to section 2106 of chapter 2 of title II
of Public Law 109-13, a 2005 emergency supplemental defense and relief
bill (and Public Law 108-199 of 2004 before it).
Public Law 109-13, for example, requires, among other things, that
the President certify that Palestinian security services have purged
their ranks of terrorists, that the Palestinian Authority stop
incitement against Israel, and that it cooperate with the US. in
investigations of Yassir Arafat's finances. These waivers have been
provided annually despite the fact that Palestinian incitement
continues, Palestinian security forces are still laden with terrorists,
and Yassir Arafat's money is still missing.
Another $100 million for Palestinian security aid and institution
building is allocated through a program called International Narcotics
Control and Law Enforcement. This is a Foreign Military Assistance
program but it is also directed by the Department of State under Section
1206(f) of the 2006 National Defense Authorization Act.
Much of the International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement
funding for the Palestinian Authority had been "reprogrammed" by
President George W. Bush, using a Presidential Determination under
Chapter 8 of Part I (Section 481) of the 1961 Foreign Assistance Act
which states "Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the President
is authorized to furnish assistance to any country or international
organization, on such terms and conditions as he may determine, for the
control of narcotic and psychotropic drugs and other controlled
substances, or for other anticrime purposes."
Other presidential wavers provided additional money from the Economic
Support Fund account to the Palestinian Authority. These were done
under the authority of the Foreign Assistance Act which states "None of
the funds made available by this Act may be obligated under an
appropriation account to which they were not appropriated, except for
transfers specifically provided for in this Act, unless the President,
prior to the exercise of any authority contained in the Foreign
Assistance Act of 1961 to transfer funds, consults with and provides a
written policy justification to the Committees on Appropriations of the
House of Representatives and the Senate."
In fact, the legislative system of appropriations and oversight
matters very little when it comes to U.S. aid to the Palestinians: the
system of foreign aid permits the president to independently "certify"
or "waive" requirements introduced by Congress. It demonstrates the
extent to which U.S. aid to the Palestinians is an instrument of
Executive policy rather than an altruistic enterprise authorized by the
Legislative branch. Of course, such methods are not unique to the
Palestinian case. Congress permits presidential waivers on everything
from Azerbaijan's blockage of Nagorno-Karabagh to the use of child
soldiers by Chad, Congo, Sudan and Yemen.
But the extent to which foreign aid to the Palestinians is a
political tool of the Executive may be in a class by itself: Western and
Palestinian supporters of continued aid routinely offer at least two
scenarios that would unfold should aid be withdrawn or reduced:
"radicalization" and "humanitarian crises." In effect the Executive
branch is blackmailed.
Legislation proposed in Congress to limit or condition funds to the
Palestinian Authority or UNRWA are largely meaningless in this light.
The "UNRWA Humanitarian Accountability Act," for example, offered by
Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen in 2010, demanded that UNRWA not be
used by or support Palestinian terrorists. But like the appropriations
bills described above, it offers the Executive branch an out by
requiring only "a written determination by the Secretary of State, based
on all information available after diligent inquiry, and transmitted to
the appropriate congressional committees along with a detailed
description of the factual basis therefore." Such a statement is a
foregone conclusion. The mechanisms for Congress to review results
independently, hearings, reports from Congressional staff, the
Congressional Research Service, and the Government Accountability
Office, have no weight except in the politics of the next appropriations
cycle.
Aid the Palestinians is a microcosm of the larger question of how
U.S. foreign aid works. Now that Hamas will evidently join Fatah in a
Palestinian Authority poised to declare statehood and request vast
additional support, creating genuine Congressional oversight -- with
teeth -- should be addressed once again.
No comments:
Post a Comment