1 FAM 480
BUREAU OF COUNTERTERRORISM and
countering violent extremism (CT)
(CT:ORG-395; 08-04-2016)
(Office of Origin: CT/EX)
1 FAM 481 Coordinator FOR
counterterrorism (CT)
1 FAM 481.1 Responsibilities
(CT:ORG-300; 03-05-2013)
a. The Coordinator for Counterterrorism (CT) or other
appropriate senior appointee serves as the principal advisor to the Secretary
of State, other Department principals, and policy bureaus on international
counterterrorism strategy, policy, and operations, and directs the Department's
counterterrorism programs. For the purposes of counterterrorism strategy,
threats, and operations, the Coordinator reports to the Secretary of
State. For matters relating to counterterrorism programs and other
routine activities of the Bureau, the Coordinator reports to the Under
Secretary for Civilian Security, Democracy and Human Rights (J).
b. The Coordinator or other appropriate senior
appointee serves as the representative of the Secretary of State on
international counterterrorism issues in international and interagency
meetings; liaises with other U.S. Government departments, agencies, and
entities; and leads and coordinates Department participation in international counterterrorism
policy and program strategy and analysis, as appropriate.
c. The Coordinator or other appropriate senior
appointee ensures that U.S. international counterterrorism activities support
U.S. foreign policy priorities and are carried out in accordance with U.S. law
and regulation.
d. The Coordinator or other appropriate senior
appointee exercises policy oversight for all State Department counterterrorism
programs, including training, and works closely with the regional bureaus, the
Bureau of Diplomatic Security (DS), the Bureau of Consular Affairs (CA), the
Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL), and the
Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR), among others. The Coordinator is
also responsible for interagency coordination of all international
counterterrorism activities of U.S. Government agencies conducted pursuant to
Public Law 105-277, Div. G, Subdiv. B, Title XXIII, Ch. 1, 2301(b), 112 Stat.
2681-824; codified at 22 U.S.C. 2651a(e).
e. The Coordinator or other appropriate senior
appointee exercises the authority to furnish all Non-Proliferation,
Anti-Terrorism, Demining, and Related Programs (NADR) Antiterrorism Assistance
to foreign countries pursuant to chapter 8 of part II of the Foreign Assistance
Act of 1961, as amended, exclusive of those functions otherwise reserved to the
Secretary or delegated to the Director of the Office of U.S. Foreign Assistance
Resources.
1 FAM 481.2 Organization
(CT:ORG-300; 03-05-2013)
An organization chart of the Bureau of Counterterrorism
(CT) is in 1
FAM Exhibit 481.2.
1 FAM 481.3 Authorities
(CT:ORG-300; 03-05-2013)
The following authorities are relevant to the Bureau of
Counterterrorism (CT):
(1) 22 U.S.C. 2651a and 22 U.S.C. 2656, general
authorities of the Secretary of State for the conduct of foreign relations and
management of the Department;
(2) National Security Decision Directive (NSDD) 207,
dated January 20, 1986;
(3) Public Law 105-277, Section 2301, dated October
21, 1998;
(4) Executive Order 13224, dated September 23, 2001;
(5) Executive Order 13261, dated March 19, 2002;
(6) Homeland Security Presidential Directive (HSPD) 6,
dated September 16, 2003;
(7) Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1189);
(8) National Security Presidential Directive (NSPD)
46, dated March 6, 2006; NSPD-46 Annex II, dated November 7, 2006; NSPD-46
Appendix B to Annex II, dated September 24, 2008;
(9) Delegation of Authority No. 293-2, dated October
23, 2011;
(10) Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 as amended (Chapter
8 of Part II, sections 571-575; 22 U.S.C. 2349aa through 2349aa-5);
(11) 22 U.S.C. 2651a(e), establishing The Office of the
Coordinator for Counterterrorism, which has overall supervision (including
policy oversight of resources) of international counterterrorism activities;
and
(12) Other authorities, as appropriate.
1 FAM 482 PRINCIPAL DEPUTY coordinator
FOR COUNTERTERRORISM
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
a. The Principal Deputy Coordinator for
Counterterrorism serves as the senior deputy and advisor to the Coordinator.
The Principal Deputy Coordinator has the authority to act on the Coordinators
behalf in his or her absence.
b. The Principal Deputy Coordinator is responsible for
overall management of the bureau.
c. The Principal Deputy Coordinator, in consultation
with the Coordinator, plans and supervises the substantive work of the bureau,
including public affairs outreach strategies.
d. The Principal Deputy Coordinator represents the
bureau in Department and interagency groups.
e. The Principal Deputy Coordinator supervises
subordinate offices, as directed by the Coordinator.
1 FAM 482.1 Office of the Executive
Director (CT/EX)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
a. The Office of the Executive Director (CT/EX) advises
the Coordinator and Principal Deputy Coordinator regarding the executive
management and direction of the bureau.
b. The CT Executive Office (CT/EX):
(1) Coordinates overall Department and bureau policy
requirements with bureau offices;
(2) Formulates and executes the D&CP budget for
the bureau;
(3) Executes the Foreign Assistance budget for the
bureau;
(4) Authorizes and approves funds for travel;
(5) Provides administrative and general support
services for the bureau;
(6) Coordinates and approves the usage of space
assigned to the bureau;
(7) Coordinates human resources services for the
bureau;
(8) Develops and coordinates the bureau records
management program; and.
(9) Manages the bureaus information management
program.
c. CT/EX liaises with other U.S Government agency
executives on a variety of counterterrorism programmatic and management issues
in the following areas:
(1) Human capital;
(2) Training and rotational assignments;
(3) Budget and financial management; and
(4) Continuity of operations.
d. CT/EX serves as the CT coordinator for internal
controls management, Office of Inspector General reports, and other reporting
requirements.
1 FAM 482.2 Office of Strategy,
Plans, and Initiatives (CT/SPI)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
The Office of Strategy, Plans, and Initiatives
(CT/SPI):
(1) Provides broad guidance and direction on
counterterrorism policy and strategy to policy offices and program implementers
in the CT Bureau, elsewhere at State Department and other U.S. Government
departments and agencies;
(2) Provides policy and programmatic formulation and
strategic direction and guidance for the Bureaus ATA, CVE, RLA, ILA, RSI, and
CTF programs;
(3) Provides policy and programmatic formulation and
strategic direction and guidance on homeland security, designations and
multilateral issues;
(4) Develops and coordinates counterterrorism strategy
and plans for the Coordinator and bureau offices to include the production of
annual budget, program, and strategic planning and reporting documents;
(5) Manages the bureaus overall relationship with the
Office of the Legal Adviser (L), and the Bureau of Legislative Affairs (H);
(6) Represents the Bureau in White House and State
Departments strategic planning processes;
(7) Manages the bureaus Congressional Affairs
portfolio to ensure the bureaus priorities and activities are well understood
and supported in Congress;
(8) Develops, coordinates and lead cross-cutting
counterterrorism initiatives, particularly those focusing on Iran, Hizballah,
Hamas and other Palestinian rejectionist groups, or on prison
rehabilitation/reintegration issues;
(9) Provides counterterrorism briefings for newly
appointed U.S. ambassadors on key issues pertaining to their assignments;
(10) Prepares briefing materials for the Coordinator,
Principal Deputy Coordinator, and other CT principals for use in Congressional
briefings, testimony, and public speeches.
1 FAM 482.3 Office of Programs
(CT/P)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
The Office of Programs (CT/P) translates CT Bureau
strategic goals and objectives, as developed and articulated by CT/SPI, into
effective capacity building programs. CT/P monitors program implementation in
accordance with Department best practices to ensure outcomes match program
objectives. CT/P:
(1) Designs, implements, monitors and evaluates
Counterterrorism Bureau programs and ensures that all CT programs and
activities are implemented in accordance with law and policy and reflect the
counterterrorism priorities of the Secretary and the Coordinator;
(2) Manages the monitoring, metrics, and outcome
evaluation of CT programs and activities to ensure alignment with the strategic
goals established on behalf of the Coordinator by the Office of Strategic
Policy, Planning, and Initiatives (CT/SPI);
(3) Ensures proper management and oversight by
agencies and nongovernmental parties responsible for implementing capacity
building programs; and
(4) Manages the bureaus overall relationship with the
Director of U.S. Foreign Assistance Resources (F).
1 FAM 483 DEPUTY Coordinator FOR
Regional and multilateral Affairs (CT/RmA)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
The Deputy Coordinator for Regional and Multilateral
Affairs (CT/RMA):
(1) Participates in the development of
counterterrorism policy together with the Principal Deputy Coordinator and the
Coordinator;
(2) Oversees the production of counterterrorism policy
discussion papers for States participation in internal and interagency
meetings as well as bilateral, regional, and multilateral meetings with foreign
government counterparts, and briefs the Coordinator on regional policy issues;
(3) Participates in interagency, bilateral, regional,
and multilateral counterterrorism meetings as required;
(4) Supervises the geographic offices and manages
their production of counterterrorism-related assessments, analyses, briefing
papers, and other products regarding counterterrorism policy across all
regions;
(5) Manages a comprehensive program of current and
long-term regional counterterrorism policy and program analysis for the
Department;
(6) Works closely with the Department of States
geopolitical regional and functional bureaus, as well as other U.S. Government
agencies, to develop and implement country-specific counterterrorism outreach,
training, and bilateral policies and programs; and
(7) Directs the Regional Strategic Initiative (RSI),
including the performance evaluation of the RSI field coordinators in seven
posts abroad.
1 FAM 483.1 Office of South and
Central Asia and the Near East (CT/SCAN)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
The Office of South and Central Asia and the Near East
(CT/SCAN):
(1) Assesses counterterrorism trends in regions,
countries, and topics of interest to the Secretary and Department principals;
(2) Develops, funds, implements, and monitors, with
constituent posts, relevant bureaus and Regional Strategic Initiative (RSI)
field officers, bilateral and regional counterterrorism training programs and
exchanges;
(3) Provides current counterterrorism resource support
to Department principals and desk officers;
(4) Drafts counterterrorism assessments and articles
for the Secretarys Daily Brief and other products; and
(5) Collaborates with experts on the National Security
Council Staff, other agencies, and outside government experts on
counterterrorism topics and countries.
1 FAM 483.2 Office of Africa,
Europe, the Americas, and Asia (CT/AEAA)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
The Office of Africa, Europe, the Americas, and Asia
(CT/AEAA):
(1) Assesses counterterrorism trends in regions,
countries, and topics of interest to the Secretary and Department principals;
(2) Develops, funds, implements, and monitors, with
constituent posts, relevant bureaus and Regional Strategic Initiative (RSI)
field officers, bilateral and regional counterterrorism training programs and
exchanges;
(3) Provides current counterterrorism resource support
to Department principals and desk officers;
(4) Drafts counterterrorism assessments and articles
for the Secretarys Daily Brief and other products; and
(5) Collaborates with experts on the National Security
Council Staff, other agencies, and outside government experts on counterterrorism
topics and countries.
1 FAM 483.3 Office of Multilateral
Affairs (CT/M)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
a. The Office of Multilateral Affairs (CT/M) oversees
Department counterterrorism engagement, policy and program development,
coordination, and implementation for U.S. participation in all multilateral
forums and organizations, including those in which the United States is not a
member.
b. CT/M is the U.S. lead for counterterrorism policy
and programs within multilateral organizations and represents the United States
at meetings of these organizations.
c. CT/M is the policy lead for the Department for the
Global Counterterrorism Forum (GCTF) and directs the administrative unit of the
GCTF.
d. CT/M manages the CT Bureaus Counter-Terrorism
Engagement Fund (CTE), which aims to build political will among foreign
government officials and civil societies and support the efforts of
multilateral organizations to promote more effective policies and programs.
1 FAM 484 DEPUTY Coordinator FOR
HOMELAND SECURITY, Screening and Designations (CT/HSSD)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
The Deputy Coordinator for Homeland Security, Screening
and Designations (CT/HSSD):
(1) Coordinates the Department's participation in
international counterterrorism activities as they affect homeland security, and
collaborates closely with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and other
U.S. departments and agencies with respect to international CT activities;
(2) Leads Department policy and program development
with respect to the sharing of terrorism screening information with foreign
partners; and
(3) Leads counterterrorism finance (CTF) policies and
strategies, including the appropriate alignment of CTF programs. CT/HS
identifies and designates targets for listing under Foreign Terrorist
Organization (FTO) and Executive Order (EO) authorities.
1 FAM 484.1 Office of Homeland
Security (CT/HS)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
a. The Office of Homeland Security (CT/HS) serves as
the principal point-of-contact for the Department with the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) for the coordination of international counterterrorism
activities as they affect homeland security.
b. CT/HS leads, for the Department policy, development
on counterterrorism issues as they affect homeland security and coordinates
closely with other Department bureaus on homeland security issues, including
transportation security, border security, and national preparedness exercises
with a counterterrorism component.
c. CT/HS leads for the Department on international
critical infrastructure security and resilience, including the Global Critical
Energy Infrastructure Protection (GCEIP) Strategy and Program.
1 FAM 484.2 Office of Terrorist
Screening and Interdiction Programs (CT/TSI)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
a. The Office of Terrorist Screening and Interdiction
Programs (CT/TSI) leads Department policy development, interagency
coordination, international engagement, and negotiations for the exchange of
biographic and biometric terrorism screening information with foreign governments,
pursuant to Homeland Security Presidential Directive-6 (HSPD-6).
b. CT/TSI works closely with other Department bureaus,
the Intelligence Community, and law enforcement agencies to coordinate
enhancements to the Terrorist Screening Database.
c. CT/TSI coordinates programs to constrain terrorist
mobility globally by helping countries at risk of terrorist activity or transit
to enhance their border security capabilities with a computerized screening
system known as the Personal Identification Secure Comparison and Evaluation
System (PISCES).
d. With other Department bureaus, CT/TSI contributes to
U.S. Government initiatives concerning the collection and analysis of biometric
information about known or suspected terrorists, watchlisting of new suspected terrorists
and managing information collection about lost or stolen passports.
1 FAM 484.3 Office of Terrorism
Finance and Designations (CT/TFD)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
a. CT/TFD, in partnership with CT/SPI and CT, is
responsible for ensuring that CT Bureau funded counterterrorism finance funded
programs are in alignment with counterterrorism finance policy objectives.
b. CT/TFD crafts group specific counterterrorism
finance policies and strategies that are designed to maximize the utility of CT
terrorist designation authorities and counterterrorism finance programs.
c. CT/TFD represents the CT Bureau at the Financial
Action Task Force (FATF) and FATF-style regional bodies.
d. The Office of Terrorism Finance and Designations
(CT/TFD) identifies and designates targets for listing under Foreign Terrorist
Organization (FTO) and Executive Order (E.O. 13224) authorities and leads the
mandated reviews of the Department of State designations under FTO authorities.
e. CT/TFD is also responsible for recommending to the
Secretary of State possible listings and rescissions of State Sponsor of
Terrorism (SST) designations pursuant to 6(j) of the Export Administration Act,
section 40 of the Arms Control Export Act, and section 620A of the Foreign
Assistance Act. In addition, CT/TFD is responsible for proposing, as
appropriate, entities and individuals designated by the State Department under
domestic sanctions regimes for listing at the UN Security Councils Taliban and
al-Qaida Committees.
f. CT/TFD leads the annual certification of countries
as not fully cooperating with U.S. antiterrorism efforts pursuant to Section
40A(a) of the Arms Export Control Act.
g. CT/TFD represents the Coordinator for
Counterterrorism on the Bureau of Diplomatic Securitys Rewards for Justice
(RFJ) interagency rewards committee, and as such, develops joint terrorist
designations/RFJ projects.
1 FAM 485 DEPUTY COordinator FOR
military coordination and policy (Ct/mcp)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
a. The Deputy Coordinator for Military Coordination and
Policy coordinates the Department of State-led interagency efforts to plan and
conduct sensitive counterterrorism operations worldwide.
b. The Deputy Coordinator
for Military Coordination and Policy:
(1) Coordinates with the Department of Defense and
other agencies on interagency/military counterterrorism activities and advises
Department officials on their implications and implementation;
(2) Leads the Foreign Emergency Support Team (FEST),
the U.S. Governments only interagency, on-call short-notice team poised to
respond to terrorist incidents worldwide;
(3) Coordinates interagency counterterrorism efforts
during hostage crises and participates in the Hostage and Personnel Recovery
Working Group, which refines and implements official U.S. Government policy
toward Americans taken captive abroad;
(4) Coordinates Department and interagency
participation in overseas counterterrorism exercises;
(5) Provides and coordinates interagency support to
the Counterterrorism Crisis Response Subcommittee of the International Special
Events Group (ISEG), which provides contingency security and crisis management
capability to major events of security concern, such as the Olympics; and
(6) Provides policy oversight for the interagency and
international Technical Support Working Group (TSWG) on behalf of the
Department of State and in coordination with the Assistant Secretary of Defense
for Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict, which provides program
management and execution for the TSWG.
1 FAM 485.1 Office of Crisis
Response Preparedness and Special Coordination (CT/CRSC)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
a. CT/CRSC is the primary office responsible for
coordinating interagency counterterrorism crisis response, preparedness and
special DOD activities and programs related to counterterrorism operations as
well as leading the Foreign Emergency Support Team (FEST).
b. CT/CRSC coordinates various DOD activities and
programs related to the implementation of DOD counterterrorism activities,
including highly sensitive interagency issues, within the Department, with
Embassies, and among agencies.
c. CT/CRSC preparedness team organizes CT bureau and
the Department's counterterrorism initiatives related to CT capacity building
and preparedness activities conducted by the interagency, Embassies, USSOCOM
and regional combatant commands.
d. CT/CRSC supports the International Security Events
Group led by the Bureau of Diplomatic Security (DS), which provides security
assistance and contingency crisis management support to foreign partners
overseas during major events which, if subjected to terrorist attack, could
have catastrophic consequences. Supported events include such things as the
Olympics, Pan-Am Games, Global Forums, etc.
e. CT/CRSC leads, trains, manages, and deploys the
Foreign Emergency Support Team (FEST). The FEST is prepared to deploy globally
on 4 hours' notice of a NSC Deputies Committee decision to respond to a foreign
emergency, such as a catastrophic bombing, hostage situation, or
weapons-of-mass-destruction (WMD) incident in support of Chiefs of Missions
overseas.
f. CT/CRSC maintains partnerships with various
agencies and Department offices to ensure that individuals with specialized
capabilities to respond to various types of terrorist emergencies are ready to
deploy.
g. CT/CRSC maintains specialized rapid response
communications capabilities and equipment, in support of its global deployment
requirements.
h. CT/CRSC maintains expertise in
weapons-of-mass-destruction (WMD) crisis management and consequence management
to deal with ongoing and post-event terrorist incidents involving chemical,
biological, radiological, or nuclear (CBRN) materials during FEST deployment.
i. CT/CRSC provides personnel as appropriate for FEST
deployments, including exercises, and may draw personnel from other parts of
the CT bureau and the 12-person Reserve Augmentation Unit for such deployments
as well.
1 FAM 485.2 Office of Technical
Programs and Operations Policy (CT/TPOP)
(CT:ORG-377; 10-09-2015)
a. CT/TPOP is the primary office responsible for CT
policy development and guidance for issues intersecting with military
counterterrorism activities, operations, and presence.
b. CT/TPOP oversees the Bureaus overall relationship
with DoD for counterterrorism military planning, and manages the process of
reviewing plans for CT and foreign policy guidance from the Department.
c. CT/TPOP also serves as the information conduit for
the CT bureau into the interagency Hostage Recovery Fusion Cell and the Special
Envoy on Hostage Affairs.
d. CT/TPOP co-chairs the Technical Support Working
Group (TSWG), in partnership with DoD and select foreign allies. The TSWG
identifies areas for research and development of technologies for combating
terrorism. TSWG works closely with government laboratories, academia, and
private-sector developers to focus research and development on technical
requirements identified by Federal, State, local, and international end users.
e. CT/TPOP provides interagency leadership and
represents the U.S. Government in the Quadrilateral Group on Chemical,
Biological, and Radiological Counterterrorism (the AUSCANUKUS CBR CT Quad),
in conjunction with allies in Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom.
f. CT/TPOP represents the Coordinator and the
Department in interagency and international forums where terrorist technical
threats are addressed.
g. CT/TPOP coordinates a 12-person Army Reserve unit
seconded to its supervision, which provides part-time help to cover surge
requirements and other augmentation to CT commensurate with the individual's
civilian skill set, including policy activities, staffing exercises and
supporting FEST deployments.
1 FAM 486 Deputy Coordinator for Countering Violent Extremism
(CT:ORG-395; 08-04-2016)
The Deputy Coordinator for
Countering Violent Extremism:
(1) Guides the
development of countering violent extremism (CVE) policy together with the
Principal Deputy Coordinator and the Coordinator;
(2) Oversees the
coordination and integration of the Department of States and U.S. governments
international CVE efforts to advance specific policy objectives, including
related monitoring and evaluation efforts;
(3) Advises the
Coordinator, the Secretary of State, and White House leadership on CVE policy
and programmatic issues;
(4) Represents State in
interagency, bilateral, regional, and multilateral CVE meetings as required;
(5) Engages with foreign
governmental and non-governmental counterparts to promote CVE initiatives and
partnerships;
(6) Supervises the CVE
office and manages the production of CVE-related assessments, analyses,
briefing papers, and other products regarding CVE policy;
(7) Works closely with
the Department of States regional and functional bureaus, as well as other
U.S. Government agencies, to develop and implement country-specific CVE
outreach, training, and bilateral policies and programs;
(8) Testifies before
Congress and briefs Congressional members and staff on CVE-related issues; and
(9) Represents State at
public fora and engages with the media to promote CVE initiatives and
partnerships.
1 FAM 486.1
Office of Countering Violent
Extremism (CT/CVE)
(CT:ORG-395; 08-04-2016)
The Office of Countering
Violent Extremism (CT/CVE) will lead the Departments international engagement
and assistance efforts to prevent violent extremists and their supporters from
radicalizing, recruiting, or inspiring individuals or groups to commit acts of
violence. Specifically, the CVE Office:
(1) Provides broad
strategic guidance and direction on CVE engagement and assistance to shape the
work of the CT Bureau, other State Department entities, and other U.S.
Government departments and agencies;
(2) Develops priorities,
plans, and programming models for using foreign assistance to counter violent
extremist messaging and promote alternative narratives, in partnership with the
Global Engagement Center;
(3) Advises program
managers in CT and other Department offices on the design, innovation,
evaluation, and prioritization of CVE assistance and programs;
(4) Maintains and
analyzes budgetary information on all the Departments planned and ongoing CVE
programs, and provides related reports to the Departments leadership and
Congress as required;
(5) Oversees engagement
with bilateral, multilateral, private sector and other non-governmental
partners to advance a broad range of CVE initiatives and partnerships;
(6) Prepares briefing
materials for the Coordinator, Principal Deputy Coordinator, and other CT
principals for use in interagency policy meetings, Congressional briefings,
testimony, and public speeches.
1 FAM 487 through 489 unassigned