2003 renewal In 2003, the compacts with the RMI and FSM were renewed for 20 years. These new compacts provided US$3.5 billion in funding for both countries. US$30 million was also be disbursed annually among
American Samoa,
Guam,
Hawaii, and the
Northern Mariana Islands in "Compact Impact" funding. This funding helped the governments of these localities cope with the expense of providing services to immigrants from the RMI, FSM, and Palau. The U.S. use of
Kwajalein Atoll for missile testing was renewed for the same period. The new compacts also changed certain immigration rules. RMI and FSM citizens traveling to the U.S. are now required to have
passports. The
US Postal Service was given the option to apply international postage rates for mail between the U.S. and RMI/FSM, phased in over five years. The USPS began implementing the change in January 2006, but decided to resume domestic services and rates in November 2007. The renewed compact, commonly called "Compact II," took effect for the FSM on June 25, 2004, and for RMI on June 30, 2004. (1962) The economic provisions of the Compact for Palau, which provided $18 million in annual subsidies and grants, expired on September 30, 2009, and the renewal talk was concluded in late 2010. U.S. financial support for Palau is based on a
continuing resolution passed by the U.S. Congress. The Compact Trust Fund set up to replace U.S. financial aid underperformed because of the
Great Recession. The military and civil defense provisions remained until 2015. An amended Compact, enacted December 17, 2003, as Public Law 108-188, provided financial assistance to the Marshall Islands and Micronesia through 2023. The Compact of Free Association agreement with the Republic of Palau, enshrined in US Public Law 99-658, was followed by a Compact Review Agreement signed between the U.S. and Palau in 2018, extending certain financial provisions through September 30, 2024.
2023 renewal Negotiations to extend the compacts became stalled in December 2020. In February 2022 the Republic of the Marshall Islands' Ambassador to the United States,
Gerald Zackios, attributed the impasse to Washington's failure to appoint a negotiator empowered by the president to discuss key issues beyond economic assistance, including remuneration for the legacy of
nuclear testing on the islands, the continuing presence of U.S. military bases and the ballistic missile test site at
Kwajalein Atoll and climate-change mitigation. Citing "the critical nature of these complex negotiations," U.S. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken announced the creation of the position of Special Presidential Envoy for Compact Negotiations on March 22, 2022, President
Joe Biden named Ambassador
Joseph Yun as the envoy to take over negotiation for amendment and continuation of COFA. Between March 2022 and October 2023, negotiations led by Ambassador Yun were held with the Compact states, and with the bipartisan support of the US Congress, the framework of the amendments were agreed to, with Yun soon after resigning from his position. Palau Finance Minister
Kaleb Udui Jr. and U.S. Ambassador Yun signed Palau's COFA extension on May 22, 2023, with the island government previously requesting to advance their date more in line with the other two countries. On May 23, 2023, FSM negotiator Leo Falcam and a State Department representative signed Micronesia's extension at the U.S. embassy in
Pohnpei. Marshall Islands' Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade
Jack Ading, alongside Ambassador Yun, signed the RMI's agreement on October 16, 2023. Total funding for all three agreements is $7.1B paid over 20 years ($889M to Palau; $3.3B to the FSM; $2.3B to the RMI; and $634M for the U.S. Postal Service to offset continuing domestic rate mail service). Approval by each legislature, to include a funding mechanism in Congress, is the final step to bring each agreement into force. On March 8, 2024, the renewed Compacts of Free Association (COFA) were officially signed into law as part of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act. ==Potential associated states==