1 FAM 530
BUREAU OF INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS AND LAW ENFORCEMENT
AFFAIRS (INL)
(CT:ORG-485; 10-17-2018)
(Office of Origin: INL/RM)
1 FAM 531 ASSISTANT SECRETARY
(CT:ORG-286; 10-16-2012)
The Department of State, through the Assistant Secretary,
Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL):
(1) Reduces the impact of international crime and
illegal drugs on the United States, its citizens, and partner nations by
providing effective foreign assistance and fostering greater bilateral and
multilateral cooperation;
(2) Establishes a capable and accountable criminal
justice sector, to include stabilizing post-conflict societies through criminal
justice sector development and reform;
(3) Works closely with U.S. Federal, State, county,
and municipal law enforcement, corrections, and justice institutions to provide
assistance, coordinate a regional approach to widespread problems, and help
stronger governments take responsibility as equal partners in the struggle to
disrupt organized crime and other destabilizing groups;
(4) Achieves its long-term objectives by ensuring its
foreign assistance programs are designed to be sustainable, long-term
generational commitments to build strong legal institutions;
(5) Supports the drug control efforts of major drug
source and transit countries by strengthening the capacity of international
partners to disrupt the drug trade;
(6) Strengthens criminal justice systems in partner
countries, institutionalizing rule of law by developing and expanding criminal
justice systems at the national, provincial, and community level to strengthen
partner country law enforcement and judicial effectiveness, foster cooperation
in legal affairs, and advance respect for gender and human rights; and
(7) Minimizes the effects of transnational organized
crime by strengthening international partnerships, reducing the impact of
transnational crime and criminal networks on the United States and its allies
through enhanced international cooperation and foreign assistance.
1 FAM 531.1 Responsibilities
(CT:ORG-286; 10-16-2012)
The Assistant Secretary for INL reports to the Under
Secretary for Civilian Security, Democracy and Human Rights (J). As delegated
by the Secretary, the Assistant Secretary is responsible for:
(1) Development, supervision, coordination and
implementation of international narcotics control assistance activities of the
Department of State as authorized under Part 1, Chapter 8 of the Foreign
Assistance Act of 1961, as amended (22 U.S.C. 2291 - 2291k);
(2) Development of assistance programs directed at
U.S. Government objectives abroad on international criminal justice issues;
(3) Coordination and management of the Departments
international counternarcotics program, the international criminal justice
program, and strategic planning for bureau programs and policies;
(4) As delegated by the Secretary, the Assistant
Secretary negotiates and concludes bilateral and multilateral agreements to
strengthen narcotics control and criminal justice systems, and to combat
transnational crime; and
(5) Substantive and coordinating responsibility for
the following Foreign Affairs Manual (FAM) materials, including the following:
1
FAM 530Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
(INL);
2
FAM 950Payment and Rewards for Information Relating to International
Narcotics Trafficking; and
2 FAM 800Managing Aircraft.
1 FAM 531.2 Organization
(CT:ORG-286; 10-16-2012)
See 1 FAM Exhibit 531.2
for an organization chart of INL.
1 FAM 531.3 Authorities
(CT:ORG-286; 10-16-2012)
a. 22 U.S.C. 2656 and 22 U.S.C. 2651a: The Secretary
of State's authorities for the conduct of foreign affairs and administration of
the Department of State.
b. Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 as amended (22 U.S.C.
2291 and 22 U.S.C. 2292), Department of State Delegation of Authority 293-2
(October 23, 2011), Section 2(g), to the Assistant Secretary for International
Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs:
(1) The functions of negotiating, concluding, and
terminating international agreements relating to international narcotics
control and anticrime programs subject to the concurrences required by the
Circular 175 Procedure; and
(2) The functions conferred upon the President by
Section 487 of the Act, together with all those authorities contained in the
Act to the extent necessary or appropriate to accomplish the purpose of the
Act.
c. Department of State Delegation of Authority 164,
(May 23, 1987), to the Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of International
Narcotics Matters (now INL), Anti-Drug Abuse Act functions.
d. Department of State Delegation of Authority 227
(December 17, 1998) to the Assistant Secretary for International Narcotics
& Law Enforcement Affairs - to approve the transfer of forfeited assets to
foreign governments.
e. Department of State Delegation of Authority 332
(August 6, 2010) to the Assistant Secretary for International Narcotics &
Law Enforcement Affairs, certain certification functions in Maritime Law.
f. State Department Basic Authorities Act, Section
36(b) (22 U.S.C. 2708(b)), narcotics offender rewards.
g. Other authorities, as appropriate.
1 FAM 532 Deputy Assistant Secretaries
(CT:ORG-286; 10-16-2012)
a. The bureau has three deputy assistant secretaries
reporting to the Assistant Secretary, through the Principal Deputy Assistant
Secretary, who determines and assigns their duties.
b. The Assistant Secretary designates a Principal
Deputy Assistant Secretary, with such commensurate responsibilities as the
Assistant Secretary delegates.
c. Office Directors report to the Assistant Secretary
through the deputy assistant secretaries as the Assistant Secretary designates.
1 FAM 532.1 Office of Resource
Management (INL/RM)
(CT:ORG-286; 10-16-2012)
The Controller/Executive Director serves as the
Office Director for INL resource management, domestic and overseas operations.
INL/RM:
(1) Directs the bureau's financial management program
including budget formulation and budget presentation and execution, and
provides fiscal accountability and reporting to Congress;
(2) Directs the personnel, administrative, and
management activities of the bureau;
(3) Directs the bureau's acquisition of commodities,
technical services and grants, accomplishes audit and end-use monitoring of
INL-funded commodities, oversees property management, and provides contract
administration guidance and support;
(4) Manages the bureaus management policy and
internal controls assurance and training, and coordinates the bureaus program
planning, monitoring, and evaluation efforts; and
(5) On behalf of the Assistant Secretary, exercises
all administrative authorities delegated to the Assistant Secretary by the
Secretary, except those authorities required by law, regulation, or otherwise
to be performed by the Assistant Secretary or higher authority.
1 FAM 532.2 Office of Policy,
Planning and Coordination (INL/PC)
(CT:ORG-286; 10-16-2012)
The Office of Policy, Planning and Coordination
(INL/PC):
(1) Develops and coordinates broad international
narcotics and crime control policy guidance for the bureau, posts, and the
Department in three main areas: Congressional Affairs, Public Affairs/Public
Diplomacy, and Multilateral Affairs;
(2) Provides analytic and management support in
connection with legislative issues including drafting and coordinating
testimony, responding to Congressional inquiries, and arranging briefings for
members of Congress and their staffs;
(3) Conceptualizes, drafts, and coordinates within the
Department and among other agencies, international narcotics and crime control
strategies;
(4) Manages the bureaus public affairs/public
diplomacy program, to include producing and coordinating daily press guidance;
arranging press conferences, press briefings, and media interviews; and
designing and developing public outreach initiatives for major programs in
which INL has significant input;
(5) Assists in developing and implementing INLs
multilateral engagement with the European Union and Group of Eight (G-8) on
drug, justice and law enforcement issues, and with various informal and formal
multilateral bodies. These include the U.S.-EU Political Dialogue on Drugs,
the Dublin Group, and the G-8 Roma-Lyon Groupthe G-8s experts group on
international organized crimeto ensure that the United States maintains its
leadership role and achieves its national objectives on these issues;
(6) Coordinates bureau and interagency engagement on
drug control and crime prevention issues within the United Nations System,
including participation in the Conference of Parties to the UN Convention
against Transnational Organized Crime (UNTOC), participation in the Conference
of States Parties to the UN Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC),
participation in the annual UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND) and UN
Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice (CCPCJ), and policy and
programmatic engagement with the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC);
(7) Manages the production and publication of the
annual, Congressionally mandated International Narcotics Control Strategy
Report, which reviews the worldwide international drug situation in detail and
serves as the evidentiary basis for the Presidents congressionally-mandated
annual narcotics certification decisions; and
(8) Serves as the bureaus central liaison point with
the Intelligence Community.
1 FAM 532.3 Office of Anticrime
Programs (INL/C)
(CT:ORG-286; 10-16-2012)
The Office of Anticrime Programs (INL/C):
(1) Provides policy support on interagency anti-crime
issues relating to combating transnational criminal threats and illicit
networks, particularly corruption, organized crime, money laundering, border
security/alien smuggling and cybercrime/intellectual property crimes;
(2) Coordinates and provides U.S. Government input to
multilateral and bilateral processes that promote cooperation, development and
implementation of international anti-crime standards and commitments;
(3) Oversees and implements the system of
International Law Enforcement Academies (ILEA) and related programs; and
(4) Coordinates and provides U.S. Government input
into demand reduction programs implemented through bilateral and multilateral
mechanisms.
1 FAM 532.4 Office of Criminal
Justice Assistance and Partnership (INL/CAP)
(CT:ORG-286; 10-16-2012)
The Office of Criminal Justice Assistance and
Partnership (INL/CAP):
(1) Provides subject matter expertise that supports
the INL offices and U.S. missions abroad in planning, designing, implementing,
monitoring, and evaluating law enforcement, justice sector, and corrections
programs in INL programs worldwide;
(2) Manages strategic outreach to build partnerships
with domestic law enforcement, corrections, and legal organizations and
professionals, multilateral organizations, and non-governmental actors to
identify opportunities for their participation in INLs foreign assistance
assessments, programs and training;
(3) Develops and supports INL-managed training for
deployed criminal justice advisors to address the pre-deployment and continuing
professional development requirements of INL advisors in the field; and
(4) Supports the efforts of the UN, regional
organizations and partner nations to enhance their ability to conduct policing
and rule of law development and operations in peacekeeping environments.
1 FAM 532.5 Office of Aviation
(INL/A)
(CT:ORG-372; 07-20-2015)
The Office of Aviation (INL/A):
(1) Is the aviation service provider for U.S.
Government-owned/leased operational, piloted aircraft specifically,
rotary-wing (helicopters) and fixed-wing (airplanes), but not necessarily
including all DOS Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) and tethered aircraft
within the Department, providing aviation expertise and resources in support of
counternarcotics programs, law enforcement, and other overseas mission
operations;
(2) Is the Departments proponent for development of
policy and oversight requirements for Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) and, as
applicable, such policy and oversight development shall be in consultation with
other DOS bureaus and consistent with their respective unique program and
operational requirements;
(3) Provides planning, operational and logistical
support, and contract oversight for aviation services in support of INL and
Department programs and missions;
(4) The INL/A Director serves as the Senior Aviation
Management Official (SAMO) for the Department, representing the Department in
the Interagency Committee for Aviation Policy (ICAP) and ensuring that the
Departments internal policies and procedures are consistent with aviation
management requirements contained in OMB Circulars and the Federal Management
Regulation; and
(5) The INL/A Director is the technical advisor for
the Aviation Governing Board, which approves aviation policies, budgets, and
strategic plans for the Departments aviation assets and activities.
1 FAM 532.6 Office of Western
Hemisphere Programs (INL/WHP)
(CT:ORG-286; 10-16-2012)
The Office of Western Hemisphere Programs (INL/WHP):
(1) Serves as the Departments program office
responsible for coordinating the development and implementation of foreign
policy objectives for narcotics and crime strategies for the Western Hemisphere
(South America, Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean), including but not
limited to transnational crime, corruption, counternarcotics, human rights,
trafficking in drugs, protection of vulnerable populations, law enforcement,
border security, criminal justice sector, and transition from military to
civilian support for host governments;
(2) Provides support and guidance to U.S. missions in
the region in implementing Department policies and programs on justice sector
issues;
(3) Provides overall program direction for INL
bilateral justice sector assistance programs in support of ongoing embassy
initiatives to enact these programs in concert with host nations;
(4) Is responsible for developing, revising and
implementing regional and drug- and crime-specific strategies and coordinating
these strategies with the U.S. interagency and international community as
necessary;
(5) Coordinates policy and programs with other U.S.
Government departments and agencies involved in criminal justice sector issues,
including international narcotics control and crime activities, particularly
with the Department of Defense (DoD), Department of Justice (DOJ), Department
of Homeland Security (DHS), Department of the Treasury, and Agency for
International Development (USAID); and
(6) Develops policy and program recommendations and
options, manages crosscutting issues and prepares position papers, speeches and
Congressional testimony.
1 FAM 532.7 Office of Africa and
the Middle East (INL/AME)
(CT:ORG-286; 10-16-2012)
The Office of Africa and the Middle East (INL/AME):
(1) Serves as the Departments program office
responsible for coordinating the development and implementation of foreign
policy objectives for narcotics and crime strategies for Africa and the Middle
East, including but not limited to transnational crime, corruption,
counternarcotics, human rights, trafficking in drugs, protection of vulnerable
populations, law enforcement, border security, criminal justice sector, and
transition from military to civilian support for host governments;
(2) Works closely with a variety of interagency
counterparts, including USAID, DOJ, DHS, and DoD; non-governmental
organizations; international organizations; and contractors; and
(3) The geographic scope of INL/AME necessitates
attention to many countries, but focuses particular attention on several high
profile countries and regions, including the West Bank, South Sudan, West
Africa, and Lebanon where INL/AME administers programs supporting security and
criminal justice sector reform, combating transnational crime, and improving
the capacity and sustainability of civil and criminal justice institutions.
1 FAM 532.8 Office of Europe and
Asia Programs (INL/EA)
(CT:ORG-286; 10-16-2012)
The Office of Europe and Asia Programs (INL/EA):
(1) Serves as the Departments program office
responsible for coordinating the development and implementation of foreign policy
objectives for narcotics and crime strategies for Europe, Eurasia, Central
Asia, and East and South Asia, including but not limited to transnational
crime, corruption, counternarcotics, human rights, trafficking in drugs,
protection of vulnerable populations, law enforcement, border security,
criminal justice sector, and transition from military to civilian support for
host governments;
(2) Is divided into two geographic teams (Europe,
Asia), each of which coordinates INL programs throughout each continent;
(3) Works closely with a variety of interagency
counterparts, such as DOJs OPDAT and ICITAP programs, non-governmental
organizations, and contractors;
(4) Manages programs in Central Asia, supporting
police and criminal justice sector reform and regional law enforcement
cooperation, especially in countering drug trafficking via the
interagency-approved Central Asia Counternarcotics Initiative (CACI);
(5) Manages programs in the Balkans, building strong,
independent criminal justice institutions that function in concert with the
international law enforcement community;
(6) In Southeast Asia, INL/EA is responsible for
establishing effective task forces of prosecutors and police that investigate
and prosecute significant criminal cases, improving crisis response, forensic
investigation, and curriculum development, and developing the police skills
through training and establishment of model police stations throughout the
countries; and
(7) In South Asia, INL/EA is responsible for
developing community policing models, implementing police training, and
expanding judicial reform.
1 FAM 532.9 Office of Afghanistan
and Pakistan Programs (INL/AP)
(CT:ORG-336; 07-03-2014)
The Office of Afghanistan and Pakistan Programs (INL/AP):
(1) Serves as the Departments program office
responsible for coordinating the development and implementation of foreign
policy objectives for narcotics and crime strategies for Afghanistan and
Pakistan, including but not limited to transnational crime, corruption,
counternarcotics, human rights, trafficking in drugs, protection of vulnerable
populations, law enforcement, border security, criminal justice, and (in
Afghanistan) transition from military to civilian support for the host
government;
(2) Serves as the bureaus liaison and advisor to
other offices in the Department and members of Congress and their staffs on
issues relating to counternarcotics and anticrime programs in Afghanistan and
Pakistan; and
(3) Develops and manages foreign assistance programs
in Afghanistan and Pakistan such as training, mentoring, and equipping of
civilian law enforcement entities; construction, renovation and operation of
correctional facilities; establishing and operating rule of law centers and
programs; supporting counternarcotics activities; and building the capacity of
the Governments of Afghanistan and Pakistan to independently manage these
issues independently.
1 FAM 533 through 539 unassigned