TITLE 50 - US CODE - SUBCHAPTER I - PROLIFERATION SECURITY INITIATIVE

50 USC 2911 - Proliferation Security Initiative improvements and authorities

(a) Sense of Congress 
It is the sense of Congress, consistent with the 9/11 Commissions recommendations, that the President should strive to expand and strengthen the Proliferation Security Initiative (in this subchapter referred to as PSI) announced by the President on May 31, 2003, with a particular emphasis on the following:
(1) Issuing a presidential directive to the relevant United States Government agencies and departments that directs such agencies and departments to
(A) establish clear PSI authorities, responsibilities, and structures;
(B) include in the budget request for each such agency or department for each fiscal year, a request for funds necessary for United States PSI-related activities; and
(C) provide other necessary resources to achieve more efficient and effective performance of United States PSI-related activities.
(2) Increasing PSI cooperation with all countries.
(3) Implementing the recommendations of the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in the September 2006 report titled Better Controls Needed to Plan and Manage Proliferation Security Initiative Activities (GAO06937C) regarding the following:
(A) The Department of Defense and the Department of State should establish clear PSI roles and responsibilities, policies and procedures, interagency communication mechanisms, documentation requirements, and indicators to measure program results.
(B) The Department of Defense and the Department of State should develop a strategy to work with PSI-participating countries to resolve issues that are impediments to conducting successful PSI interdictions.
(4) Establishing a multilateral mechanism to increase coordination, cooperation, and compliance among PSI-participating countries.
(b) Budget submission 

(1) In general 
Each fiscal year in which activities are planned to be carried out under the PSI, the President shall include in the budget request for each participating United States Government agency or department for that fiscal year, a description of the funding and the activities for which the funding is requested for each such agency or department.
(2) Report 
Not later than the first Monday in February of each year in which the President submits a budget request described in paragraph (1), the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of State shall submit to Congress a comprehensive joint report setting forth the following:
(A) A 3-year plan, beginning with the fiscal year for the budget request, that specifies the amount of funding and other resources to be provided by the United States for PSI-related activities over the term of the plan, including the purposes for which such funding and resources will be used.
(B) For the report submitted in 2008, a description of the PSI-related activities carried out during the 3 fiscal years preceding the year of the report, and for the report submitted in 2009 and each year thereafter, a description of the PSI-related activities carried out during the fiscal year preceding the year of the report. The description shall include, for each fiscal year covered by the report
(i) the amounts obligated and expended for such activities and the purposes for which such amounts were obligated and expended;
(ii) a description of the participation of each department or agency of the United States Government in such activities;
(iii) a description of the participation of each foreign country or entity in such activities;
(iv) a description of any assistance provided to a foreign country or entity participating in such activities in order to secure such participation, in response to such participation, or in order to improve the quality of such participation; and
(v) such other information as the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of State determine should be included to keep Congress fully informed of the operation and activities of the PSI.
(3) Classification 
The report required by paragraph (2) shall be in an unclassified form but may include a classified annex as necessary.
(c) Implementation report 
Not later than 180 days after August 3, 2007, the President shall transmit to the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate a report on the implementation of this section. The report shall include
(1) the steps taken to implement the recommendations described in paragraph (3) of subsection (a); and
(2) the progress made toward implementing the matters described in paragraphs (1), (2), and (4) of subsection (a).
(d) GAO reports 
The Government Accountability Office shall submit to Congress, for each of fiscal years 2007, 2009, and 2011, a report with its assessment of the progress and effectiveness of the PSI, which shall include an assessment of the measures referred to in subsection (a).

50 USC 2912 - Authority to provide assistance to cooperative countries

(a) In general 
The President is authorized to provide assistance under subsection (b) to any country that cooperates with the United States and with other countries allied with the United States to prevent the transport and transshipment of items of proliferation concern in its national territory or airspace or in vessels under its control or registry.
(b) Types of assistance 
The assistance authorized under subsection (a) consists of the following:
(1) Assistance under section 2763 of title 22.
(2) Assistance under chapters 4 (22 U.S.C. 2346 et seq.) and 5 (22 U.S.C. 2347 et seq.) of part II of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961.
(3) Drawdown of defense[1] excess defense articles and services under section 516 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2321j).
(c) Congressional notification 
Assistance authorized under this section may not be provided until at least 30 days after the date on which the President has provided notice thereof to the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on Foreign Affairs, and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on Foreign Relations, and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate, in accordance with the procedures applicable to reprogramming notifications under section 634A(a) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2394–1 (a)), and has certified to such committees that such assistance will be used in accordance with the requirement of subsection (e) of this section.
(d) Limitation 
Assistance may be provided to a country under subsection (a) in no more than 3 fiscal years.
(e) Use of assistance 
Assistance provided under this section shall be used to enhance the capability of the recipient country to prevent the transport and transshipment of items of proliferation concern in its national territory or airspace, or in vessels under its control or registry, including through the development of a legal framework in that country to enhance such capability by criminalizing proliferation, enacting strict export controls, and securing sensitive materials within its borders, and to enhance the ability of the recipient country to cooperate in PSI operations.
(f) Limitation on ship or aircraft transfers 

(1) Limitation 
Except as provided in paragraph (2), the President may not transfer any excess defense article that is a vessel or an aircraft to a country that has not agreed, in connection with such transfer, that it will support and assist efforts by the United States, consistent with international law, to interdict items of proliferation concern until 30 days after the date on which the President has provided notice of the proposed transfer to the committees described in subsection (c) in accordance with the procedures applicable to reprogramming notifications under section 634A(a) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2394–1 (a)), in addition to any other requirement of law.
(2) Exception 
The limitation in paragraph (1) shall not apply to any transfer, not involving significant military equipment, in which the primary use of the aircraft or vessel will be for counternarcotics, counterterrorism, or counter-proliferation purposes.
[1] So in original. The word “defense” probably should not appear before “excess”.