Ukraine: Status of Foreign Assistance
Report Type |
Reports and Testimonies |
Report Date |
March 28, 2024 |
Release Date |
March 28, 2024 |
Report No. |
GAO-24-106884 |
Summary:
What GAO Found
Russia's February 2022 invasion of Ukraine has had devastating consequences: causing tremendous loss of life, creating a humanitarian crisis, threatening democracy, and exacerbating global challenges such as food insecurity. In response, Congress appropriated more than $113 billion under four Ukraine supplemental appropriations acts (Ukraine acts). From those appropriations, the Departments of State, the Treasury, Agriculture (USDA), and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) identified $43 billion in foreign assistance as allocated in response to the crisis in Ukraine. In addition to the supplemental funding, State, Treasury, USDA, and USAID identified about $1.1 billion in other funding in response to the crisis in Ukraine. This combined $44.1 billion in foreign assistance was allocated largely for economic and humanitarian assistance. As of December 31, 2023, based on data that GAO compiled and assessed, State, USAID, Treasury, and USDA had obligated about $42.5 billion of this amount and disbursed about $33.8 billion of it.
GAO found that State was not using a systematic approach to categorize and separately track the status of foreign assistance specifically in response to the crisis in Ukraine. Consequently, State faced challenges in providing the status of this foreign assistance. Without such separate tracking, State cannot provide timely information on the status of foreign assistance related to the Ukraine crisis that can be used to understand the status of assistance and to inform decisions about future funding.
This foreign assistance generally falls into six categories:
Economic Growth, such as financial support for the Ukrainian private sector;
Humanitarian Assistance, such as food and shelter for internally displaced persons and refugees;
Peace and Security, such as equipment for border police;
Democracy, Human Rights, and Governance, such as strengthening public financial management practices;
Health, such as addressing infectious disease outbreaks; and
Education and Social Services, such as mental health programs for people affected by the war.
Why GAO Did This Study
Foreign assistance supports U.S. national interests and responds to humanitarian crises, among other things. This report focuses on foreign assistance funds—largely for civilians—allocated in response to the crisis in Ukraine, including for efforts associated with countries outside Ukraine that have also been affected by the crisis. This review does not cover funds allocated for other purposes or to other agencies, such as funding to the Department of Defense related to the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative. Specifically, this report examines the status of the $44.1 billion in foreign assistance funding identified by State, Treasury, USDA, and USAID, as well as the types of activities this funding supports, in response to the crisis in Ukraine caused by the 2022 Russian invasion.
Division M of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, included a provision for GAO to conduct oversight of the assistance provided in the Ukraine acts. This report is part of a series of reviews that GAO has underway evaluating the types of U.S. assistance, including security assistance, being provided in response to the crisis in Ukraine. To determine the status of funding, we reviewed and assessed State, Treasury, USDA, and USAID financial information. To describe the types of assistance, we reviewed agency documentation and interviewed agency officials.
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