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The Compacts of Free Associatio

Overview
The Compacts  of Free Association govern the relationships
between the United States and the Republic of the Marshall
Islands (RMI), Federated States of Micronesia (FSM), and
Republic of Palau. The Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Palau,
and the Northern Mariana Islands were districts of the
former U.S.-administered United Nations Trust Territory of
the Pacific Islands, established after World War II. In 1978,
the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and Palau rejected the
option of U.S. territorial or commonwealth status and
instead chose the status of free association with the United
States. The Northern Marianas chose commonwealth status,
and nearby Guam, occupied by the United States after the
Spanish American War  ended in 1898, became a U.S.
territory in 1950.

Citizens of the RMI, FSM, and Palau (Freely Associated
States or FAS) have the right to reside and work in the
United States and its territories as lawful non-immigrants or
habitual residents. More than 94,000 FAS citizens live in
the United States, including children under age 18 who
were born in the United States and hold dual citizenship.
The FAS  do not have their own militaries, and FAS citizens
are eligible to join the U.S. military; over 1,000 FAS
citizens serve in the U.S. Armed Forces.

The FAS  cover a maritime area larger than the continental
United States, govern over 1,000 islands and atolls, and
have a combined population of approximately 200,000. The
FAS  economies face structural challenges similar to many
other Pacific Island countries (PICs), including lack of
economies of scale, small land areas, limited natural and
human  resources, remote locations, poor infrastructure, and
vulnerability to climate change. The RMI, FSM, and Palau
rank 162d, 192d, and 118th, respectively, out of 229
countries by gross domestic product per capita.

Located roughly 2,500 miles southwest of Hawaii, the FAS
play a role in supporting the U.S. security presence in the
Pacific Islands region at a time of increasing strategic
competition between the United States and its allies, on one
hand, and the People's Republic of China (PRC or China),
on the other. The Biden Administration's 2022 Indo-Pacific
Strategy refers to the Compacts of Free Association as the
bedrock of the U.S. role in the Pacific. The RMI and Palau
are among four PICs that have diplomatic relations with
Taiwan and not the PRC. Micronesia, along with some
other PICs, rejected a 2022 PRC proposal for a sweeping
diplomatic, economic, and security pact between China and
10 PICs with which China has diplomatic relations.

Compact Negotiations
Economic  assistance pursuant to Title II of the Compacts of
Free Association expired at the end of FY2023 for the


                             Updated November  13, 2023

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Marshall Islands and Micronesia and is set to expire at the
end of FY2024  for Palau. Compact provisions related to
defense, security, migration, and other areas are to continue
unchanged. The  Department of the Interior (DOI) has
funded and administered this assistance, also referred to as
grant assistance, through mandatory or permanent
appropriations since the Compacts' inception. The FAS also
are eligible for some U.S. federal programs and services.

Figure  I . The Freely Associated States


Source: CRS. Information from Esri and U.S. Department of State.


Since March 2022, Ambassador  Joseph Yun, the State
Department's Special Envoy for Compact Negotiations, led
talks with the FAS to renew Compact economic assistance.
In May 2023, the United States signed agreements with the
FSM  and Palau on extending economic assistance for 20
years, and in October 2023, the United States signed a 20-
year economic assistance agreement with the RMI.
Although Compact  economic assistance for Palau does not
expire until the end of FY2024, the United States and Palau
agreed to start the next (third) term of assistance at the
beginning of FY2024, along with the RMI and FSM. The
next phase of Compact assistance to the FAS is to include
greater support for the environment, climate change
adaptation, health care, education, and infrastructure.

In November  2023, H.J.Res. 96 was introduced to approve
the U.S.-RMI, U.S.-FSM, and U.S.-Palau agreements and
amend  the Compacts. The agreements include grant
assistance and trust fund contributions for the RMI, FSM,
and Palau that total approximately $2.3 billion, $3.3 billion,
and $0.9 billion, respectively, for FY2024-FY2043. In
addition, the agreements include $634 million to continue
the U.S. Postal Service in the FAS. The Continuing
Appropriations Act, FY2024 (P.L. 118-15) extended grant
assistance to the FSM through November 17, 2023.

Compensation  for past nuclear testing was a sticking point
in the U.S.-RMI Compact negotiations. From 1946 to 1958,


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