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Foreign Agricultural Service

The Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) is the foreign affairs agency with primary responsibility for the United States Department of Agriculture's (USDA) overseas programs – market development, international trade agreements and negotiations, and the collection of statistics and market information. It also administers the USDA's export credit guarantee and food aid programs and helps increase income and food availability in developing nations by mobilizing expertise for agriculturally led economic growth. The FAS mission statement reads, "Linking U.S. agriculture to the world to enhance export opportunities and global food security," and its motto is "Linking U.S. Agriculture to the World."[1]

Roots in analysis edit

USDA posted its first employee abroad in 1882, with assignment of Edmund Moffat to London.[2] In 1894, USDA created a Section of Foreign Markets in its Division of Statistics, which by 1901 numbered seven employees.[3]

 
Roster of the Section of Foreign Markets in 1901.

It was succeeded over the next few decades by increasingly larger units. Creation of this series of units in Washington to analyze foreign competition and demand for agricultural commodities was paralleled by assignment abroad of agricultural statistical agents, commodity specialists, and "agricultural commissioners".

Moffat went out as a "statistical agent" of USDA's Division of Statistics but with the status of Deputy Consul General on the roster of the Department of State at London.[4] Subsequent USDA officials assigned overseas, however, did not enjoy diplomatic or consular status. This impeded their work, which at that point consisted mainly of collecting, analyzing, and transmitting to Washington time-sensitive market information on agricultural commodities.[5]

 
1922 telegram from agricultural commissioner at London to USDA headquarters.

The analytical unit in Washington, by the early 1920s supervised by Leon Estabrook, deputy chief of USDA's Bureau of Agricultural Economics, compiled publications based on reports from the USDA's overseas staff, U.S. consuls abroad, and data collected by the Rome-based International Institute of Agriculture.[6]

In 1924, USDA officials Nils Olsen and Louis Guy Michael and Congressman John Ketcham began drafting legislation to create an agricultural attaché service with diplomatic status. The legislation passed the House multiple times, but it did not pass the Senate until 1930, in part due to opposition from then-Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover. Hoover, however, eventually supported the legislation to garner support of the farm bloc during his presidential campaign.[7] Accordingly, the Foreign Agricultural Service was created by the Foreign Agricultural Service Act of 1930 (46 Stat. 497), which President Herbert Hoover signed into law on June 5, 1930.

The law stipulated that the FAS consist of overseas USDA officials. The USDA also created a Foreign Agricultural Service Division within the Bureau of Agricultural Economics to serve as the FAS's headquarters staff in Washington, D.C., naming Asher Hobson, a noted economist and political scientist, as its first head. The 1930 Act explicitly granted the USDA's overseas officials diplomatic status and the right to the diplomatic title attaché. In short order, FAS posted additional staff overseas, to Marseille, Pretoria, Belgrade, Sydney, and Kobe, in addition to existing staff in London, Buenos Aires, Berlin, and Shanghai. In Washington, Hobson hired Lazar Volin, a Russian émigré, as the agency's first D.C.-based regional analyst, to specialize in the study of Russia as a competitor to U.S. agriculture.

International trade policy edit

 
Cover art for the Bureau of Agricultural Economics weekly circular in the 1930s.

In 1934, Congress passed the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, which stipulated that the President must consult with the Secretary of Agriculture when negotiating tariff reductions for agricultural commodities. Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace delegated this responsibility to the Foreign Agricultural Service Division, and thus began the FAS's role in formulation and implementation of international trade policy.[8] The FAS led agricultural tariff negotiations, first concluding a new tariff agreement with Cuba, followed by Belgium, Haiti, Sweden, Brazil and Colombia. By 1939, new agricultural tariffs were in place with 20 countries, including the United Kingdom, the United States' largest agricultural trading partner.[9]

This new responsibility spurred a change in field reporting from overseas offices. To negotiate tariff agreements, the FAS needed comprehensive information on the domestic agricultural policies of trading partners, and the primary source of this information was the agency's field offices abroad. Thus, in addition to traditional commodity reporting, the attachés and commissioners were called on to add policy analysis to their portfolios.[10]

On December 1, 1938, the Foreign Agricultural Service Division was upgraded, made directly subordinate to the Secretary, and renamed simply the Foreign Agricultural Service. On July 1, 1939, however, President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered all diplomatic personnel, including the agricultural attachés and commissioners, transferred to the Department of State.[11] The Foreign Agricultural Service was abolished, and its headquarters staff was renamed the Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations (OFAR).[12] At that time the Director of Foreign Agricultural Relations, Leslie A. Wheeler, was appointed by executive order to the Board of the Foreign Service and the Board of Examiners, an acknowledgement of OFAR's status as a foreign affairs agency.[13]

Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations edit

 
OFAR logo used 1939–1953, taken from a 1952 publication cover.

OFAR began handling food aid in 1941 when President Roosevelt and the Congress authorized $1.35 billion of food assistance to Great Britain. During this period OFAR also led negotiations that resulted in creation of the International Wheat Council, and began assisting Latin American countries to develop their agriculture. This latter effort was related to the need for strategic commodities as World War II loomed, as well as the need to tie South America closer to the Allies and thereby to keep Nazi Germany from gaining a foothold in the New World.[14] During World War II, OFAR analyzed food availability in both allied and enemy countries, and promoted the stockpiling of 100 million bushels (2.7 million metric tons) of wheat for feeding refugees after the anticipated end of the war.[15]

 
OFAR-created map of Asia, showing rice surplus and deficit areas.

After the war OFAR was instrumental in carrying out land reform in Japan and offering agricultural technical assistance under the Marshall Plan and the Point Four Program. By 1953, OFAR had roughly 400 agricultural specialists working on development programs in 27 foreign countries. OFAR also continued food aid programs, particularly using the Agricultural Act of 1949's authorities to donate surplus commodities. The intent of these efforts was first, to combat communism; second, to promote export sales of U.S. agricultural products; and third, to improve diets in foreign countries through extension of technical assistance and technology transfer.[16]

At this point OFAR directed the work of overseas technical assistance programs while the Department of State directed the work of the agricultural attachés. Frictions began to develop as the Department of State began to deny USDA requests for information from the attachés, leading to pressure from both agricultural producer groups and influential congressmen for the attachés to be returned to USDA control.[17]

OFAR participated actively with the Department of State in negotiating the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), signed in 1947 and expanded through subsequent negotiation rounds, although agriculture was not a major focus until the Uruguay Round of negotiations. At the same time, OFAR was heavily involved in founding the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, with Director of Foreign Agricultural Relations Leslie A. Wheeler playing a particularly instrumental role.[15]

FAS is reconstituted edit

On March 10, 1953, Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson abolished OFAR and reconstituted the Foreign Agricultural Service.[18] In April 1954, FAS handed off national security–related technical assistance to the International Cooperation Administration (USAID's forerunner) and began to concentrate on foreign market development for U.S. agricultural commodities, signaling a radical shift in the agency's focus.[19] On September 1, 1954, following passage of H.R. 8033 (P.L. 83-690), the agricultural attachés were transferred back from State Department to FAS.

In the same year, Congress passed Public Law 480 (P.L. 83-480), the Food for Peace Act, which became the backbone of FAS's food aid and market development efforts. Agricultural attachés began negotiating agreements for concessional sale of U.S. farm commodities to foreign countries on terms of up to 30 years and in their own local currencies. The Act was uncommon in that it allowed for the agreements made by the FAS to bypass the normal advice and consent of the U.S. Senate.[20]

 
FAS logo, 1953–2003

In 1955, FAS began signing cooperative agreements with groups representing American producers of specific commodities to expand foreign demand. The first such agreement was signed with the National Cotton Council. This activity came to be called the Market Development Cooperator Program, and the groups themselves to be called "cooperators".[21]

In 1961, the General Sales Manager of USDA's Commodity Stabilization Service (CSS) and his staff were merged into FAS, bringing with them operational responsibility for export credit and food aid programs. In particular, the General Sales Manager was responsible for setting prices for export sale of USDA-owned surplus commodities that had been acquired through domestic farm support programs.[22] At the same time, the CSS Barter and Stockpiling Manager was also moved to FAS. In the postwar era USDA's Commodity Credit Corporation was heavily involved in efforts to barter CCC-owned commodities acquired via domestic farm support programs for strategic commodities available from foreign countries short of hard currency. By the mid-1960s, however, as European and Asian economies recovered, the emphasis on barter waned.[23]

In 1969, the General Sales Manager and his staff were split off to form a separate USDA agency, the Export Marketing Service (EMS).[24] In 1974, however, EMS was re-merged with FAS.[25] In 1977, under pressure from the Congress, the Carter Administration created an "Office of the General Sales Manager" nominally headed by the General Sales Manager, but in reality still a subunit of FAS and subordinate to the FAS Administrator.[26] In 1981 the Ronald Reagan Administration abolished the Office of the General Sales Manager and formally restored its status as a program area of FAS.[27] During that time, the GSM's responsibilities expanded from mere disposition of surplus commodities to management of commodity export credit guarantee programs, foreign food assistance programs, and direct credit programs.

The Foreign Agricultural Service, a foreign affairs agency since 1930, was included in the Foreign Service Act of 1980. Agricultural attachés were offered the choice of remaining civil servants or being grandfathered into the Foreign Service. Since that time the vast majority of agricultural officers overseas, just like State Department officials overseas, have been Foreign Service Officers. Since 1953, 12 former agricultural attachés have been confirmed as American Ambassadors.

Major events edit

Trade tensions with the European Economic Community (EEC) boiled over in 1962 with the first "Chicken War", a trade dispute arising from the EEC's application of protective tariffs on poultry meat imported from the United States in retaliation for President Kennedy's imposition of a ceiling on textile imports and raising of tariffs on carpets, glass and bicycles. FAS negotiators and analysts, including future Administrator Rolland "Bud" Anderson, supported talks that resulted in the EEC paying $26 million in damages, though in Anderson's words, "We won the battle but lost the war as U.S. exports of these products to Europe soon became insignificant". The so-called "Chicken War" was a precursor to numerous other trade disputes, including the 2002 "Poultry War", when Russia retaliated against the United States' steel tariffs by barring imports of U.S. poultry meat, and the dispute over the European Union's ban on imports of U.S. beef produced from cattle treated with growth promotants.

In 1972 a short grain crop in the USSR resulted in the Soviet Union quietly concluding grain purchasing contracts from a relatively small number of the secretive private multinational grain traders who dominated world trade in cereals. Because crop surveys in mid-spring had given the impression of a normal crop, FAS's agricultural attaché in Moscow chose not to follow up with additional crop observation travel, and thus missed a severe drought that set in after the last trip. As a result of this lapse, international grain traders and exporting nations were unaware of the Soviets' dire need for massive grain imports. By the time the scope of Soviet purchases became known, the USSR had locked in supplies at low, subsidized prices, leaving other importers and consumers scrambling for what was left at significantly higher prices.[28][29] This event, known as the "Great grain robbery", led to creation in the Foreign Agricultural Service of a satellite imagery unit for remote sensing of foreign crop conditions, negotiation of a long-term grain agreement (LTA) with the Soviet Union, and imposition of an export sales reporting requirement for U.S. grain exporters. It also impressed on FAS the need for "boots-on-the-ground" observation of crop conditions in critical countries.

In the 1980s, the European Economic Community (EEC) emerged as a competitor for export sales, particularly of grain. EEC export restitutions (subsidies) undercut U.S. sales, with the result that farm-state Members of Congress, led by Senator Bob Dole of Kansas, pushed through new legislation authorizing broader subsidization of commercial export sales. This Export Enhancement Program (or EEP, though it was originally called "BICEP" by Senator Dole) was used primarily to counter EEC subsidies in important markets. Use of EEP opened the United States to criticism from less developed countries on the grounds that export subsidies undercut their own farmers by depressing global commodity prices. By the mid-1990s EEP was largely abandoned in favor of negotiating for a multilateral ban on agricultural export subsidies; it was last used, for a single sale, during the Clinton administration. With founding of the World Trade Organization in January 1995, trade-distorting domestic agricultural supports were capped in all member states and absolute import quotas were banned, but negotiations on eliminating export subsidies continue still.

Food aid edit

FAS has managed food assistance programs since 1941, and today uses a mix of statutory authorities. The traditional programs are Section 416(b) of the Agricultural Act of 1949, which makes surplus commodities available for donation overseas, and Title I of Public Law 480 (Food for Peace), which authorizes concessional sales. These programs were designed to support government-to-government transactions. The 1985 Farm Bill created the Food for Progress program, which facilitated delivery of food aid through non-governmental organizations as well as foreign governments. Food for Progress can draw on multiple sources, including in-kind surplus commodities and appropriated funds.

The most recent addition to the array of FAS-implemented food aid programs is the McGovern/Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program. Named in honor of Senator Dole and Senator George McGovern, it supports school feeding programs in less developed countries, and reserves authority for supporting maternal and child health programs. It was authorized by the 2002 Farm Bill and reauthorized in 2008. Funding sources have varied since the pilot Global Food for Education program was deployed in fiscal year 2001, often combining both appropriated funds and funding from the Commodity Credit Corporation’s borrowing authority.[30][31]

International development and national security edit

 
The FAS Millennium logo, 2003–2013, based in part on the USDA "rolling fields" logo

After a nine-year hiatus from international agricultural development work at USDA, on July 12, 1963, Secretary Orville Freeman ordered creation of an International Agricultural Development Service (IADS), which was subordinate to the same Assistant Secretary of Agriculture as but separate from FAS. IADS served as USDA's liaison with USAID and other assistance organizations, linking them to USDA expertise in pursuit of developmental goals. Matthew Drosdoff was hired effective February 19, 1964, to be the first permanent Administrator of IADS. In March 1969, after the Richard Nixon Administration came to power, IADS was briefly merged into FAS, then in November 1969 was split out into a separate Foreign Economic Development Service (FEDS). On February 6, 1972, FEDS was abolished and its functions transferred to the Economic Research Service, where it became the Foreign Development Division.[32]

In 1977, Quentin West proposed consolidating three USDA units involved in technical assistance and development work into a single agency to be called the Office of International Cooperation and Development: the Foreign Development Division, the Science and Education Administration, an interagency consortium funded by foreign currency earnings, and FAS' International Organization Affairs Staff. West's proposal was accepted and thus OICD was created, with responsibility for technical assistance, training, foreign currency-funded research, and international organization liaison.[33] In 1994, USDA's Office of International Cooperation and Development was merged with FAS, bringing technical assistance back to FAS after a 40-year absence.[34]

In 2003, FAS posted agricultural officers to Baghdad, not for the by-then traditional purposes of market intelligence and market development, but to reconstruct the Iraqi Ministry of Agriculture. FAS also began organizing USDA contributions to Provincial Reconstruction Teams in Iraq and Afghanistan.[35][36] This marked FAS' return to national security work.[37][38] Then-Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack pledged to continue and to expand that work.[39] FAS' role in national security work, however, remains controversial.[40][41][42][43]

Heads of Service and Ambassadors edit

Heads of Service edit

From 1930 to about 1934, division heads in USDA, including the heads of the Foreign Agricultural Service Division, had no formal title, but were referred to as "In-charge", though the Official Register of the United States Government listed them as "Chief".[44] Beginning around 1934 and until 1938, the head of FASD was called the "Chief". When FAS was renamed in 1938, the head was titled "Director", and that title carried over into OFAR and then the renewed FAS until 1954. The first head of FAS to bear the title "Administrator" was William Lodwick in that year.[45] Heads of the Foreign Agricultural Service and Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations since 1930 have been (periods as acting head are in italics):

Name Term Agency
Asher Hobson 1930–1931 Foreign Agricultural Service Division
Bureau of Agricultural Economics
Leslie A. Wheeler 1931–1934, 1934–1938 Foreign Agricultural Service Division
Bureau of Agricultural Economics
1938–1939 Foreign Agricultural Service
1939–1948 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations
Dennis A. FitzGerald 1948–1949 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations
Fred J. Rossiter 1949 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations
Stanley Andrews 1949–1952 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations
Francis A. Flood 1952 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations
John J. Haggerty 1952–1953 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations
Francis R. Wilcox 1953 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations
Romeo Ennis Short 1953 Foreign Agricultural Service
Clayton E. Whipple 1953–1954 Foreign Agricultural Service
William G. Lodwick 1954–1955 Foreign Agricultural Service
Gwynn Garnett 1955–1958 Foreign Agricultural Service
Maxwell S. Myers 1958–1961 Foreign Agricultural Service
Robert C. Tetro 1961–1962 Foreign Agricultural Service
Raymond A. Ioanes 1962–1973 Foreign Agricultural Service
David L. Hume 1973–1977 Foreign Agricultural Service
Thomas R. Hughes 1977–1981 Foreign Agricultural Service
Richard A. Smith 1981–1985 Foreign Agricultural Service
Thomas O. Kay 1985–1989 Foreign Agricultural Service
Rolland E. Anderson 1989–1991 Foreign Agricultural Service
Duane C. Acker 1991–1992 Foreign Agricultural Service
Stephen L. Censky 1992–1993 Foreign Agricultural Service
Richard B. Schroeter 1993–1994 Foreign Agricultural Service
August Schumacher, Jr. 1994–1997 Foreign Agricultural Service
Lon S. Hatamiya 1997–1999 Foreign Agricultural Service
Timothy J. Galvin 1999–2001 Foreign Agricultural Service
Mattie R. Sharpless 2001 Foreign Agricultural Service
Mary T. Chambliss 2001–2002 Foreign Agricultural Service
A. Ellen Terpstra 2002–2006 Foreign Agricultural Service
Michael W. Yost 2006–2009 Foreign Agricultural Service
Suzanne K. Hale 2009 Foreign Agricultural Service
Michael V. Michener 2009 Foreign Agricultural Service
John D. Brewer 2010–2011 Foreign Agricultural Service
Suzanne E. Heinen 2011–2012, 2012–2013 Foreign Agricultural Service
Philip C. Karsting 2013–2017 Foreign Agricultural Service
Holly Higgins 2017–2018 Foreign Agricultural Service
James Higgiston 2018 Foreign Agricultural Service
Ken Isley 2018–2021 Foreign Agricultural Service
Daniel Whitley 2021, 2021–present[46] Foreign Agricultural Service

General Sales Managers edit

General Sales Managers since 1955 have been (periods as acting GSM are in italics):

Name Term Agency
Francis C. Daniels 1955–1959 Commodity Stabilization Service
Sylvester J. Meyers 1959–1961 ditto
Frank LeRoux 1961–1966 Foreign Agricultural Service
James A. Hutchins, Jr. 1966–1967, 1968–1969 ditto
George Parks 1967–1968 ditto
Clifford Pulvermacher 1969–1972 Export Marketing Service
Laurel Meade 1972–1974 ditto
George S. Shanklin 1974 Foreign Agricultural Service
James Hutchinson 1974–1977 ditto
Kelly Harrison 1977–1981 ditto
Alan Tracy 1981–1982 ditto
Melvin Sims 1982–1989 ditto
F. Paul Dickerson 1989–1991 ditto
Christopher E. Goldthwait 1991–1993, 1993–1999 ditto
Richard Fritz 1999–2001 ditto
Mary T. Chambliss 2001 ditto
Franklin D. Lee 2001–2002 ditto
W. Kirk Miller 2002–2009 ditto
Patricia R. Sheikh 2009 ditto
John D. Brewer 2009 ditto
Christian Foster 2010 ditto
Janet A. Nuzum 2010–2011 ditto
Suzanne E. Heinen 2011–2013 ditto
Philip C. Karsting 2013–2014 ditto
Asif J. Chaudhry 2014–2015 ditto
Suzanne Palmieri 2015–2016 ditto
Allison Thomas 2016–2017 ditto
Bryce Quick 2017 ditto
Bobby Richey 2018 ditto
Clay Hamilton 2018–2023 ditto
Brooke Jamison 2023- ditto

Heads of International Development edit

Administrators of the Office of International Cooperation and Development and its predecessors from creation until it was merged with FAS in 1994 were (periods as acting Administrator are in italics):

Name Term Agency
Matthew Drosdoff 1964–1966 International Agricultural Development Service
Lester R. Brown 1966–1969 ditto
Quentin West 1969–1972 Foreign Economic Development Service
Quentin West 1972–1977 Foreign Development Division, Economic Research Service
Quentin West 1977–1980 Office of International Cooperation and Development
Ruth Zagorin 1980–1981 ditto
Joan S. Wallace 1981–1989 ditto
Robert Scherle 1989–1990 ditto
Steve Abrams 1990 ditto
Duane Acker 1990–1992 ditto
John Miranda 1992–1993 ditto
Lynnett M. Wagner 1993–1994 ditto

Ambassadors edit

Agricultural officers who have served or are serving as Ambassadors are:

Name Agricultural Posts Ambassadorships, Presidential Appointments, Significant Appointments
Lester D. Mallory assistant agricultural commissioner, Marseille and Paris; agricultural attaché, Paris and Mexico City Jordan, 1953–1958, Guatemala, 1958–1959, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, 1960
Charles R. Burrows assistant agricultural attaché (rank of vice consul), Buenos Aires Honduras, 1960–1965
Howard R. Cottam agricultural economist, Paris; agricultural attaché, Rome Kuwait, 1963–1969
Clarence A. Boonstra assistant agricultural attaché, Havana; agricultural attaché, Manila, Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro and Lima Costa Rica, 1967–1969
Philip Habib agricultural attaché (vice consul), Ottawa and Wellington South Korea 1971–1974; Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs 1974–1976; Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs 1976–1978; Acting Secretary of State 1977; Special Negotiator for the Middle East 1981; winner of the Presidential Medal of Freedom 1982; featured on a postage stamp 2006
H. Reiter Webb assistant agricultural attaché, London; agricultural attaché, Cairo Chief Negotiator for Textile Matters with rank of Ambassador 1979–1981 (not confirmed by the Senate)
George S. Vest agricultural attaché (vice consul), Quito European Community 1981–1985, Director General of the Foreign Service 1985–1989
Christopher E. Goldthwait assistant agricultural attaché, Bonn; agricultural attaché and counselor at Lagos Chad 1999–2004
Mattie R. Sharpless administrative assistant, Paris (OECD); assistant agricultural attaché, Brussels USEC; agricultural attaché, Bern; agricultural counselor, Rome; agricultural minister-counselor, Paris Central African Republic 2001–2002
Suzanne K. Hale agricultural attaché and agricultural trade officer, Tokyo; agricultural minister-counselor, Beijing and Tokyo Federated States of Micronesia 2004–2007
Patricia M. Haslach agricultural attaché, New Delhi Laos 2004–2007, APEC 2008–2009, Coordinator for Assistance Transition in Iraq (with ambassadorial rank) 2009–2010, Deputy Coordinator for Diplomacy, Office of the Coordinator for the Global Hunger and Food Security Initiative, 2010–2013, Ethiopia 2013–2016, acting Assistant Secretary of State for Economic and Business Affairs, 2016–2018
Asif J. Chaudhry agricultural attaché, Warsaw; senior agricultural attaché, counselor, and acting minister-counselor, Moscow; agricultural minister-counselor, Cairo Moldova 2008–2011, Foreign Policy Advisor to the Chief of Naval Operations, 2011–2014
Allan Mustard agricultural attaché, Moscow; agricultural trade officer, Istanbul; agricultural counselor, Vienna; agricultural minister-counselor, Moscow, Mexico City, and New Delhi Turkmenistan, 2015–2019

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on April 8, 2010. Retrieved April 10, 2010.
  2. ^ National Archives, Record Group 59, General Records of the Department of State, Consular Correspondence, 1785–1906, Instructions to Consular Officers, Consular Instructions, 1800–1906, vol. 104, p. 99, call number A-1, Entry 59
  3. ^ Official Register of the United States Government, 1901, vol. 1, p. 1094
  4. ^ Moffat's status is attested in the British diplomatic lists in London, the Official Register of the United States Government, and the State Department Register.
  5. ^ Clem, The U.S. Agricultural Attaché, His History and His Work
  6. ^ Letter from Secretary Henry C. Wallace to the Hon. Milton William Shreve, May 3, 1924, in the National Archives, Record Group 16, Records of the Secretary of Agriculture, General Correspondence 1906–1970 (1924), Box 1032.
  7. ^ Papers of Nils Olsen and Reminiscences of Leslie A. Wheeler
  8. ^ Organization and Functions of the Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations
  9. ^ Progress in tariff negotiations is documented in the annual Report of the Secretary of Agriculture for the years 1935 -1939.
  10. ^ Report of the Secretary of Agriculture, 1935, p. 6.
  11. ^ Reorganization Plan No. II April 28, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Secretary's Memorandum 825, June 30, 1939
  13. ^ National Archives, Record Group 16, General Correspondence of the Office of the Secretary of Agriculture, 170/6/34/1, Box 3024, and also Reminiscences of Leslie A. Wheeler.
  14. ^ National Archives, Record Group 16, Records of the Office of the Secretary of Agriculture, General Correspondence, 1906–75, Foreign Relations (1940), Box 87. Memorandum for the Secretary, June 25, 1940, "Re: Need for clearer publicity on Inter-American cartel," from Mordecai Ezekial
  15. ^ a b Reminiscences of Leslie A. Wheeler
  16. ^ "The United States Farmer and the World Around Him", speech by John J. Haggerty, Director of Foreign Agricultural Relations, contained in the Journal of Farm Economics, December 1952
  17. ^ Memorandum by Fred J. Rossiter, Assistant Administrator, Foreign Agricultural Service, January 26, 1954
  18. ^ Secretary's Memorandum 1320, Supplement 1, March 10, 1953
  19. ^ Memorandum of Understanding between USDA and Department of State on "Conduct of Technical Assistance Overseas," April 14, 1954, and also Memorandum "To All Employees of the Foreign Agricultural Service" from acting Administrator Clayton E. Whipple, November 19, 1953
  20. ^ Mustard, Allen (May 2003). "An Unauthorized History of the FAS". The Foreign Service Journal. Vol. 80, no. 5. pp. 38–39. from the original on August 14, 2022. Retrieved December 2, 2020.
  21. ^ Howard, et al, Partners in Developing Farm Markets Overseas
  22. ^ Commodity Stabilization Service Notice General No. 305, June 28, 1955; Secretary's Memorandum 1446, February 24, 1961
  23. ^ National Archives, Record Group 166, Records of the Foreign Agricultural Service, Policy Correspondence 1951–1964, Boxes 2, 4, 6, 7.
  24. ^ Secretary's Memorandum No. 1648, Supplement 1, March 28, 1969
  25. ^ Secretary's Memorandum 1833, Supplement 1, February 1, 1974
  26. ^ Secretary's Memorandum 2001, November 27, 1979, and interview with George Pope, former Assistant Administrator for Export Credits, Foreign Agricultural Service
  27. ^ Interview with George Pope
  28. ^ Morgan, Merchants of Grain; Luttrell, "The Russian Wheat Deal – Hindsight vs. Foresight, Reprint No. 81" July 28, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  29. ^ Oral history of R. Keith Severin.
  30. ^ Partially derived from information on the FAS website at . Archived from the original on May 15, 2009. Retrieved May 31, 2009..
  31. ^ Interview with Mary T. Chambliss, former Deputy Administrator for Export Credits, Foreign Agricultural Service
  32. ^ Personal recollections of Verle Lanier, Richard Rortvedt, and Mollie Iler, augmented by information gleaned from past issues of the FAS Letter and miscellaneous records from the National Archives and Records Administration.
  33. ^ Interview with Hal G. Wynne, former budget director, Foreign Agricultural Service, cited in Mustard.
  34. ^ Department of Agriculture Reorganization Act of 1994
  35. ^ Rebuilding Agriculture and Food Security in Iraq, News About Iraqi Agricultural Reconstruction (2003–Present) . Archived from the original on October 20, 2012. Retrieved September 16, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  36. ^ USDA at Work for Agriculture in Afghanistan, November 2010 June 6, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  37. ^ Foreign Service Journal, May 2009, FAS At a Crossroads: Reshaping Ag Diplomacy (pp. 27–31) . Archived from the original on May 5, 2009. Retrieved May 5, 2009.
  38. ^ Statement by Michael V. Michener Administrator, Foreign Agricultural Service, U.S. Department Of Agriculture, before the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs, Washington, DC, Tuesday, May 19, 2009 (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 7, 2010. Retrieved February 4, 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  39. ^ Washington Post, "Tom Vilsack: Leading 'an Everyday, Every-Way' USDA", May 21, 2009 [1] September 22, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
  40. ^ Jerry Hagstrom, "Interagency debate over FAS role heats up" June 6, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Government Executive, October 9, 2009.
  41. ^ Jerry Hagstrom, "Conflict Over FAS/USAID Roles: Clinton Strong Defender of FAS Traditional Purpose" June 6, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Progressive Farmer, October 9, 2009
  42. ^ Jerry Hagstrom, "Lugar questioning FAS role"[dead link], AgWeek, October 5, 2009
  43. ^ Hagstrom, Jerry (December 23, 2009). . Government Executive. Archived from the original on June 6, 2011. Retrieved December 24, 2009.
  44. ^ Wheeler, Reminiscences, and Official Register
  45. ^ Official Register
  46. ^ "Whitley Named Administrator of USDA's Foreign Agricultural Service". USDA. July 21, 2021. from the original on July 24, 2021. Retrieved July 24, 2021.

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  • U.S. Department of State (April 19, 2006). Foreign Relations of the United States. Washington: USGPO.
  • U.S. Department of State. Foreign Service List. Washington: USGPO. LCCN 10016369.
  • Wheeler, Leslie A. (1940). Reciprocal Trade Agreements—A New Method Of Tariff Making (Yearbook of Agriculture, 1940, pp. 585–595). Washington: USGPO.[permanent dead link]
  • Wheeler, Leslie A. (1952). Reminiscences of Leslie A. Wheeler. New York: Oral History Collection of Columbia University.

Further reading edit

U.S. government websites edit

Statutes edit

  • "U.S. Code, Title 7 (Agriculture), Chapter 35A (Price Support of Agricultural Commodities)" (PDF). Retrieved May 28, 2020. Chapter 35A contains Section 416of the Agricultural Act of 1949 (7 U.S.C. 1431), the surplus disposal authority making Commodity Credit Corporation-owned commodities available for donation to foreign beneficiaries.
  • "U.S. Code, Title 7 (Agriculture), Chapter 41 (Food for Peace)" (PDF). Retrieved May 28, 2020. Chapter 41 includes the Food for Peace Act (7 U.S.C. 1691 et seq.), Food for Progress Act of 1985 (7 U.S.C. 1736o), McGovern-Dole Food for Education Program (7 U.S.C. 1736o–1), Local and Regional Procurement Program (7 U.S.C. 1726c), Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust Act (7 U.S.C. 1736f–1).
  • "U.S. Code, Title 7 (Agriculture), Chapter 42 (Agricultural Commodity Set-Aside), Section 1748 (Annual reports by agricultural attachés)" (PDF). Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  • "U.S. Code, Title 7 (Agriculture), Chapter 42 (Agricultural Commodity Set-Aside), Section 1749 (Attaché educational program)" (PDF). Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  • "U.S. Code, Title 7 (Agriculture), Chapter 43 (Foreign Market Development)" (PDF). Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  • "U.S. Code, Title 7 (Agriculture), Chapter 87 (Export Promotion)" (PDF). Retrieved October 24, 2012. Basic authority for the Foreign Agricultural Service resides in Subchapter V: Foreign Agricultural Service (7USC5692-5695).
  • "U.S. Code, Title 7, Sec. 3293. Agricultural fellowship program for middle income countries, emerging democracies, and emerging markets" (PDF). Cochran Fellowship Program authority
  • "U.S. Code, Title 19 (Customs Duties), Sec. 2152. Advice from executive departments and other sources" (PDF). Retrieved May 28, 2020. (President must seek advice of Secretary of Agriculture before signing any trade agreement)
  • "U.S. Code, Title 19 (Customs Duties), Chapter 22 (Uruguay Round Trade Agreements), Subchapter IV (Agriculture Related Provisions), Sec. 3601–3624" (PDF). Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  • "U.S. Code, Title 22 (Foreign Relations), Chapter 52 (Foreign Service), Sec. 3922 (Utilization of Foreign Service personnel system by other agencies)" (PDF). Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  • "U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Compilations of Agricultural Law, Index by Subject". Retrieved May 28, 2020.

Federal Regulations edit

  • "Code of Federal Regulations: Title 7—Agriculture, Chapter XIV—Commodity Credit Corporation, Department of Agriculture, Subchapter C—Export Programs". Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  • "Code of Federal Regulations: Title 7—Agriculture, Chapter XV—Foreign Agricultural Service". Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  • "Code of Federal Regulations: Title 7—Part 1484 RIN 0551–AA96 Foreign Market Development Program" (PDF). Retrieved November 10, 2020.
  • "Code of Federal Regulations: Title 7—Part 1485 RIN 0551–AA97 Market Access Program" (PDF). Retrieved November 10, 2020.

Departmental Regulations edit

USDA Regulations edit
  • "Departmental Regulation 1051-001, Coordination of USDA Activities with Foreign Countries" (PDF).
  • "Departmental Regulation 1051-002, International Activities and Agreements of USDA Agencies" (PDF).
Foreign Affairs Manual edit
  • "15 FAM 260 GUIDELINES FOR ALLOCATING RESIDENTIAL SPACE".

Other edit

  • "National Archives, Records of the Foreign Agricultural Service". Retrieved March 23, 2009.
  • "U.S. Government Accountability Office reports on the Foreign Agricultural Service". Retrieved March 25, 2009.

Other publications and documents edit

  • . Archived from the original on February 3, 2010. Retrieved February 3, 2010.
  • . Archived from the original on August 7, 2011. Retrieved March 24, 2009.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 19, 2011. Retrieved March 24, 2009.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 7, 2009. Retrieved March 26, 2009.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 7, 2009. Retrieved March 26, 2009.
  • "AgExporter, March 2003, Helping U.S. Producers Feed, Clothe and House the World" (PDF). Library of Congress. Retrieved March 23, 2009.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 7, 2009. Retrieved March 26, 2009.
  • . March 5, 2003. Archived from the original on March 22, 2009. Retrieved March 25, 2009.
  • Hanrahan, Charles E. (May 30, 2001). . CRS Issue Brief for Congress. Congressional Research Service. Archived from the original on January 9, 2009. Retrieved June 6, 2010.
  • . Archived from the original on January 10, 2016. Retrieved March 25, 2009.
  • "AgExporter, November 1, 1995, USDA has long history in overseas agricultural development". Retrieved March 24, 2009.
  • Mission of Foreign Agricultural Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture : joint hearings before the Subcommittee on Foreign Agriculture and Hunger of the Committee on Agriculture and the Subcommittee on Information, Justice, Transportation, and Agriculture of the Committee on Government Operations, House of Representatives, One Hundred Third Congress, first session, November 10 and 16, 1993. 1994. ISBN 9780160444661. Retrieved March 26, 2009.
  • U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of Public Affairs, Video and Teleconference Division. "FAS recruiting video from 1990". YouTube. Archived from the original on December 13, 2021. Retrieved January 20, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • . Archived from the original on September 27, 2009. Retrieved October 3, 2009.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 13, 2008. Retrieved March 24, 2009.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 13, 2008. Retrieved March 24, 2009.
  • "Organization and Functions of the Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations, 1940". Retrieved March 27, 2009.
  • "Memorandum 804, Describing Functions of the Foreign Agricultural Service, January 28, 1939". Retrieved March 27, 2009.
  • "The Foreign Agricultural Service Act of 1930, June 5, 1930". Retrieved March 27, 2009.
  • "The Foreign Crops, USDA statistical circular, by Charles M. Daugherty, May 1911 – April 1913". Retrieved March 27, 2009.
  • "Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture, 1883". 1883. Retrieved May 28, 2020. (see page 10 for report of posting to London of Edmund Moffat)

Oral Histories On Line edit

  • "Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Oral Histories". Retrieved March 23, 2009. (use the search engine for a "Full Text" search on "Foreign Agricultural Service" in quotes)
  • "Oral History of Stanley Andrews at the Truman Presidential Library". Retrieved March 25, 2009.
  • "Oral History of Dennis A. Fitzgerald at the Truman Presidential Library". Retrieved March 25, 2009.

Media Articles (chronological order) edit

  • "Government Executive, January 27, 2010, Vilsack names more key deputies, by Jerry Hagstrom". Retrieved February 3, 2010.
  • "Government Executive, October 9, 2009, Interagency debate over FAS role heats up, by Jerry Hagstrom". Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  • "Progressive Farmer, October 9, 2009, Conflict Over FAS/USAID Roles: Clinton Strong Defender of FAS Traditional Purpose, by Jerry Hagstrom". Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  • "Lexington Clipper-Herald, October 5, 2009, Smith calls for hearing on new ag export markets, by Robert Pore". Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  • "AgWeek, October 5, 2009, Lugar questioning FAS role, by Jerry Hagstrom". Retrieved October 10, 2009.[dead link]
  • . Archived from the original on May 4, 2010. Retrieved December 6, 2010.
  • . Archived from the original on May 16, 2011. Retrieved May 4, 2009.
  • . Archived from the original on September 16, 2011. Retrieved October 13, 2011.
  • . Archived from the original on September 16, 2011. Retrieved October 13, 2011.
  • "AgWeek, March 8, 2009, A Mess at FAS, by Jerry Hagstrom". March 2, 2009.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 26, 2010. Retrieved March 23, 2009.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 26, 2010. Retrieved March 23, 2009.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 26, 2010. Retrieved March 23, 2009.
  • "Journal of Farm Economics, December 1952, The United States Farmer and the World Around Him". Retrieved March 26, 2009.
  • "Journal of Farm Economics, July 1930, News Items". Retrieved March 23, 2009.

External links edit

  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Department of Agriculture.
  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Archives and Records Administration.
  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Library of Congress.

foreign, agricultural, service, this, article, about, division, united, states, department, agriculture, agriculture, extensions, general, agricultural, extension, foreign, affairs, agency, with, primary, responsibility, united, states, department, agriculture. This article is about a division of the United States Department of Agriculture For agriculture extensions in general see Agricultural extension The Foreign Agricultural Service FAS is the foreign affairs agency with primary responsibility for the United States Department of Agriculture s USDA overseas programs market development international trade agreements and negotiations and the collection of statistics and market information It also administers the USDA s export credit guarantee and food aid programs and helps increase income and food availability in developing nations by mobilizing expertise for agriculturally led economic growth The FAS mission statement reads Linking U S agriculture to the world to enhance export opportunities and global food security and its motto is Linking U S Agriculture to the World 1 Contents 1 Roots in analysis 2 International trade policy 3 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations 4 FAS is reconstituted 5 Major events 6 Food aid 7 International development and national security 8 Heads of Service and Ambassadors 8 1 Heads of Service 8 2 General Sales Managers 8 3 Heads of International Development 8 4 Ambassadors 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 12 1 U S government websites 12 1 1 Statutes 12 1 2 Federal Regulations 12 1 3 Departmental Regulations 12 1 3 1 USDA Regulations 12 1 3 2 Foreign Affairs Manual 12 1 4 Other 12 2 Other publications and documents 12 3 Oral Histories On Line 12 4 Media Articles chronological order 13 External linksRoots in analysis editUSDA posted its first employee abroad in 1882 with assignment of Edmund Moffat to London 2 In 1894 USDA created a Section of Foreign Markets in its Division of Statistics which by 1901 numbered seven employees 3 nbsp Roster of the Section of Foreign Markets in 1901 It was succeeded over the next few decades by increasingly larger units Creation of this series of units in Washington to analyze foreign competition and demand for agricultural commodities was paralleled by assignment abroad of agricultural statistical agents commodity specialists and agricultural commissioners Moffat went out as a statistical agent of USDA s Division of Statistics but with the status of Deputy Consul General on the roster of the Department of State at London 4 Subsequent USDA officials assigned overseas however did not enjoy diplomatic or consular status This impeded their work which at that point consisted mainly of collecting analyzing and transmitting to Washington time sensitive market information on agricultural commodities 5 nbsp 1922 telegram from agricultural commissioner at London to USDA headquarters The analytical unit in Washington by the early 1920s supervised by Leon Estabrook deputy chief of USDA s Bureau of Agricultural Economics compiled publications based on reports from the USDA s overseas staff U S consuls abroad and data collected by the Rome based International Institute of Agriculture 6 In 1924 USDA officials Nils Olsen and Louis Guy Michael and Congressman John Ketcham began drafting legislation to create an agricultural attache service with diplomatic status The legislation passed the House multiple times but it did not pass the Senate until 1930 in part due to opposition from then Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover Hoover however eventually supported the legislation to garner support of the farm bloc during his presidential campaign 7 Accordingly the Foreign Agricultural Service was created by the Foreign Agricultural Service Act of 1930 46 Stat 497 which President Herbert Hoover signed into law on June 5 1930 The law stipulated that the FAS consist of overseas USDA officials The USDA also created a Foreign Agricultural Service Division within the Bureau of Agricultural Economics to serve as the FAS s headquarters staff in Washington D C naming Asher Hobson a noted economist and political scientist as its first head The 1930 Act explicitly granted the USDA s overseas officials diplomatic status and the right to the diplomatic title attache In short order FAS posted additional staff overseas to Marseille Pretoria Belgrade Sydney and Kobe in addition to existing staff in London Buenos Aires Berlin and Shanghai In Washington Hobson hired Lazar Volin a Russian emigre as the agency s first D C based regional analyst to specialize in the study of Russia as a competitor to U S agriculture International trade policy edit nbsp Cover art for the Bureau of Agricultural Economics weekly circular in the 1930s In 1934 Congress passed the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act which stipulated that the President must consult with the Secretary of Agriculture when negotiating tariff reductions for agricultural commodities Secretary of Agriculture Henry A Wallace delegated this responsibility to the Foreign Agricultural Service Division and thus began the FAS s role in formulation and implementation of international trade policy 8 The FAS led agricultural tariff negotiations first concluding a new tariff agreement with Cuba followed by Belgium Haiti Sweden Brazil and Colombia By 1939 new agricultural tariffs were in place with 20 countries including the United Kingdom the United States largest agricultural trading partner 9 This new responsibility spurred a change in field reporting from overseas offices To negotiate tariff agreements the FAS needed comprehensive information on the domestic agricultural policies of trading partners and the primary source of this information was the agency s field offices abroad Thus in addition to traditional commodity reporting the attaches and commissioners were called on to add policy analysis to their portfolios 10 On December 1 1938 the Foreign Agricultural Service Division was upgraded made directly subordinate to the Secretary and renamed simply the Foreign Agricultural Service On July 1 1939 however President Franklin D Roosevelt ordered all diplomatic personnel including the agricultural attaches and commissioners transferred to the Department of State 11 The Foreign Agricultural Service was abolished and its headquarters staff was renamed the Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations OFAR 12 At that time the Director of Foreign Agricultural Relations Leslie A Wheeler was appointed by executive order to the Board of the Foreign Service and the Board of Examiners an acknowledgement of OFAR s status as a foreign affairs agency 13 Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations edit nbsp OFAR logo used 1939 1953 taken from a 1952 publication cover OFAR began handling food aid in 1941 when President Roosevelt and the Congress authorized 1 35 billion of food assistance to Great Britain During this period OFAR also led negotiations that resulted in creation of the International Wheat Council and began assisting Latin American countries to develop their agriculture This latter effort was related to the need for strategic commodities as World War II loomed as well as the need to tie South America closer to the Allies and thereby to keep Nazi Germany from gaining a foothold in the New World 14 During World War II OFAR analyzed food availability in both allied and enemy countries and promoted the stockpiling of 100 million bushels 2 7 million metric tons of wheat for feeding refugees after the anticipated end of the war 15 nbsp OFAR created map of Asia showing rice surplus and deficit areas After the war OFAR was instrumental in carrying out land reform in Japan and offering agricultural technical assistance under the Marshall Plan and the Point Four Program By 1953 OFAR had roughly 400 agricultural specialists working on development programs in 27 foreign countries OFAR also continued food aid programs particularly using the Agricultural Act of 1949 s authorities to donate surplus commodities The intent of these efforts was first to combat communism second to promote export sales of U S agricultural products and third to improve diets in foreign countries through extension of technical assistance and technology transfer 16 At this point OFAR directed the work of overseas technical assistance programs while the Department of State directed the work of the agricultural attaches Frictions began to develop as the Department of State began to deny USDA requests for information from the attaches leading to pressure from both agricultural producer groups and influential congressmen for the attaches to be returned to USDA control 17 OFAR participated actively with the Department of State in negotiating the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade GATT signed in 1947 and expanded through subsequent negotiation rounds although agriculture was not a major focus until the Uruguay Round of negotiations At the same time OFAR was heavily involved in founding the UN Food and Agriculture Organization with Director of Foreign Agricultural Relations Leslie A Wheeler playing a particularly instrumental role 15 FAS is reconstituted editOn March 10 1953 Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson abolished OFAR and reconstituted the Foreign Agricultural Service 18 In April 1954 FAS handed off national security related technical assistance to the International Cooperation Administration USAID s forerunner and began to concentrate on foreign market development for U S agricultural commodities signaling a radical shift in the agency s focus 19 On September 1 1954 following passage of H R 8033 P L 83 690 the agricultural attaches were transferred back from State Department to FAS In the same year Congress passed Public Law 480 P L 83 480 the Food for Peace Act which became the backbone of FAS s food aid and market development efforts Agricultural attaches began negotiating agreements for concessional sale of U S farm commodities to foreign countries on terms of up to 30 years and in their own local currencies The Act was uncommon in that it allowed for the agreements made by the FAS to bypass the normal advice and consent of the U S Senate 20 nbsp FAS logo 1953 2003In 1955 FAS began signing cooperative agreements with groups representing American producers of specific commodities to expand foreign demand The first such agreement was signed with the National Cotton Council This activity came to be called the Market Development Cooperator Program and the groups themselves to be called cooperators 21 In 1961 the General Sales Manager of USDA s Commodity Stabilization Service CSS and his staff were merged into FAS bringing with them operational responsibility for export credit and food aid programs In particular the General Sales Manager was responsible for setting prices for export sale of USDA owned surplus commodities that had been acquired through domestic farm support programs 22 At the same time the CSS Barter and Stockpiling Manager was also moved to FAS In the postwar era USDA s Commodity Credit Corporation was heavily involved in efforts to barter CCC owned commodities acquired via domestic farm support programs for strategic commodities available from foreign countries short of hard currency By the mid 1960s however as European and Asian economies recovered the emphasis on barter waned 23 In 1969 the General Sales Manager and his staff were split off to form a separate USDA agency the Export Marketing Service EMS 24 In 1974 however EMS was re merged with FAS 25 In 1977 under pressure from the Congress the Carter Administration created an Office of the General Sales Manager nominally headed by the General Sales Manager but in reality still a subunit of FAS and subordinate to the FAS Administrator 26 In 1981 the Ronald Reagan Administration abolished the Office of the General Sales Manager and formally restored its status as a program area of FAS 27 During that time the GSM s responsibilities expanded from mere disposition of surplus commodities to management of commodity export credit guarantee programs foreign food assistance programs and direct credit programs The Foreign Agricultural Service a foreign affairs agency since 1930 was included in the Foreign Service Act of 1980 Agricultural attaches were offered the choice of remaining civil servants or being grandfathered into the Foreign Service Since that time the vast majority of agricultural officers overseas just like State Department officials overseas have been Foreign Service Officers Since 1953 12 former agricultural attaches have been confirmed as American Ambassadors Major events editTrade tensions with the European Economic Community EEC boiled over in 1962 with the first Chicken War a trade dispute arising from the EEC s application of protective tariffs on poultry meat imported from the United States in retaliation for President Kennedy s imposition of a ceiling on textile imports and raising of tariffs on carpets glass and bicycles FAS negotiators and analysts including future Administrator Rolland Bud Anderson supported talks that resulted in the EEC paying 26 million in damages though in Anderson s words We won the battle but lost the war as U S exports of these products to Europe soon became insignificant The so called Chicken War was a precursor to numerous other trade disputes including the 2002 Poultry War when Russia retaliated against the United States steel tariffs by barring imports of U S poultry meat and the dispute over the European Union s ban on imports of U S beef produced from cattle treated with growth promotants In 1972 a short grain crop in the USSR resulted in the Soviet Union quietly concluding grain purchasing contracts from a relatively small number of the secretive private multinational grain traders who dominated world trade in cereals Because crop surveys in mid spring had given the impression of a normal crop FAS s agricultural attache in Moscow chose not to follow up with additional crop observation travel and thus missed a severe drought that set in after the last trip As a result of this lapse international grain traders and exporting nations were unaware of the Soviets dire need for massive grain imports By the time the scope of Soviet purchases became known the USSR had locked in supplies at low subsidized prices leaving other importers and consumers scrambling for what was left at significantly higher prices 28 29 This event known as the Great grain robbery led to creation in the Foreign Agricultural Service of a satellite imagery unit for remote sensing of foreign crop conditions negotiation of a long term grain agreement LTA with the Soviet Union and imposition of an export sales reporting requirement for U S grain exporters It also impressed on FAS the need for boots on the ground observation of crop conditions in critical countries In the 1980s the European Economic Community EEC emerged as a competitor for export sales particularly of grain EEC export restitutions subsidies undercut U S sales with the result that farm state Members of Congress led by Senator Bob Dole of Kansas pushed through new legislation authorizing broader subsidization of commercial export sales This Export Enhancement Program or EEP though it was originally called BICEP by Senator Dole was used primarily to counter EEC subsidies in important markets Use of EEP opened the United States to criticism from less developed countries on the grounds that export subsidies undercut their own farmers by depressing global commodity prices By the mid 1990s EEP was largely abandoned in favor of negotiating for a multilateral ban on agricultural export subsidies it was last used for a single sale during the Clinton administration With founding of the World Trade Organization in January 1995 trade distorting domestic agricultural supports were capped in all member states and absolute import quotas were banned but negotiations on eliminating export subsidies continue still Food aid editFAS has managed food assistance programs since 1941 and today uses a mix of statutory authorities The traditional programs are Section 416 b of the Agricultural Act of 1949 which makes surplus commodities available for donation overseas and Title I of Public Law 480 Food for Peace which authorizes concessional sales These programs were designed to support government to government transactions The 1985 Farm Bill created the Food for Progress program which facilitated delivery of food aid through non governmental organizations as well as foreign governments Food for Progress can draw on multiple sources including in kind surplus commodities and appropriated funds The most recent addition to the array of FAS implemented food aid programs is the McGovern Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program Named in honor of Senator Dole and Senator George McGovern it supports school feeding programs in less developed countries and reserves authority for supporting maternal and child health programs It was authorized by the 2002 Farm Bill and reauthorized in 2008 Funding sources have varied since the pilot Global Food for Education program was deployed in fiscal year 2001 often combining both appropriated funds and funding from the Commodity Credit Corporation s borrowing authority 30 31 International development and national security edit nbsp The FAS Millennium logo 2003 2013 based in part on the USDA rolling fields logoAfter a nine year hiatus from international agricultural development work at USDA on July 12 1963 Secretary Orville Freeman ordered creation of an International Agricultural Development Service IADS which was subordinate to the same Assistant Secretary of Agriculture as but separate from FAS IADS served as USDA s liaison with USAID and other assistance organizations linking them to USDA expertise in pursuit of developmental goals Matthew Drosdoff was hired effective February 19 1964 to be the first permanent Administrator of IADS In March 1969 after the Richard Nixon Administration came to power IADS was briefly merged into FAS then in November 1969 was split out into a separate Foreign Economic Development Service FEDS On February 6 1972 FEDS was abolished and its functions transferred to the Economic Research Service where it became the Foreign Development Division 32 In 1977 Quentin West proposed consolidating three USDA units involved in technical assistance and development work into a single agency to be called the Office of International Cooperation and Development the Foreign Development Division the Science and Education Administration an interagency consortium funded by foreign currency earnings and FAS International Organization Affairs Staff West s proposal was accepted and thus OICD was created with responsibility for technical assistance training foreign currency funded research and international organization liaison 33 In 1994 USDA s Office of International Cooperation and Development was merged with FAS bringing technical assistance back to FAS after a 40 year absence 34 In 2003 FAS posted agricultural officers to Baghdad not for the by then traditional purposes of market intelligence and market development but to reconstruct the Iraqi Ministry of Agriculture FAS also began organizing USDA contributions to Provincial Reconstruction Teams in Iraq and Afghanistan 35 36 This marked FAS return to national security work 37 38 Then Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack pledged to continue and to expand that work 39 FAS role in national security work however remains controversial 40 41 42 43 Heads of Service and Ambassadors editHeads of Service edit From 1930 to about 1934 division heads in USDA including the heads of the Foreign Agricultural Service Division had no formal title but were referred to as In charge though the Official Register of the United States Government listed them as Chief 44 Beginning around 1934 and until 1938 the head of FASD was called the Chief When FAS was renamed in 1938 the head was titled Director and that title carried over into OFAR and then the renewed FAS until 1954 The first head of FAS to bear the title Administrator was William Lodwick in that year 45 Heads of the Foreign Agricultural Service and Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations since 1930 have been periods as acting head are in italics Name Term AgencyAsher Hobson 1930 1931 Foreign Agricultural Service Division Bureau of Agricultural EconomicsLeslie A Wheeler 1931 1934 1934 1938 Foreign Agricultural Service Division Bureau of Agricultural Economics1938 1939 Foreign Agricultural Service1939 1948 Office of Foreign Agricultural RelationsDennis A FitzGerald 1948 1949 Office of Foreign Agricultural RelationsFred J Rossiter 1949 Office of Foreign Agricultural RelationsStanley Andrews 1949 1952 Office of Foreign Agricultural RelationsFrancis A Flood 1952 Office of Foreign Agricultural RelationsJohn J Haggerty 1952 1953 Office of Foreign Agricultural RelationsFrancis R Wilcox 1953 Office of Foreign Agricultural RelationsRomeo Ennis Short 1953 Foreign Agricultural ServiceClayton E Whipple 1953 1954 Foreign Agricultural ServiceWilliam G Lodwick 1954 1955 Foreign Agricultural ServiceGwynn Garnett 1955 1958 Foreign Agricultural ServiceMaxwell S Myers 1958 1961 Foreign Agricultural ServiceRobert C Tetro 1961 1962 Foreign Agricultural ServiceRaymond A Ioanes 1962 1973 Foreign Agricultural ServiceDavid L Hume 1973 1977 Foreign Agricultural ServiceThomas R Hughes 1977 1981 Foreign Agricultural ServiceRichard A Smith 1981 1985 Foreign Agricultural ServiceThomas O Kay 1985 1989 Foreign Agricultural ServiceRolland E Anderson 1989 1991 Foreign Agricultural ServiceDuane C Acker 1991 1992 Foreign Agricultural ServiceStephen L Censky 1992 1993 Foreign Agricultural ServiceRichard B Schroeter 1993 1994 Foreign Agricultural ServiceAugust Schumacher Jr 1994 1997 Foreign Agricultural ServiceLon S Hatamiya 1997 1999 Foreign Agricultural ServiceTimothy J Galvin 1999 2001 Foreign Agricultural ServiceMattie R Sharpless 2001 Foreign Agricultural ServiceMary T Chambliss 2001 2002 Foreign Agricultural ServiceA Ellen Terpstra 2002 2006 Foreign Agricultural ServiceMichael W Yost 2006 2009 Foreign Agricultural ServiceSuzanne K Hale 2009 Foreign Agricultural ServiceMichael V Michener 2009 Foreign Agricultural ServiceJohn D Brewer 2010 2011 Foreign Agricultural ServiceSuzanne E Heinen 2011 2012 2012 2013 Foreign Agricultural ServicePhilip C Karsting 2013 2017 Foreign Agricultural ServiceHolly Higgins 2017 2018 Foreign Agricultural ServiceJames Higgiston 2018 Foreign Agricultural ServiceKen Isley 2018 2021 Foreign Agricultural ServiceDaniel Whitley 2021 2021 present 46 Foreign Agricultural ServiceGeneral Sales Managers edit General Sales Managers since 1955 have been periods as acting GSM are in italics Name Term AgencyFrancis C Daniels 1955 1959 Commodity Stabilization ServiceSylvester J Meyers 1959 1961 dittoFrank LeRoux 1961 1966 Foreign Agricultural ServiceJames A Hutchins Jr 1966 1967 1968 1969 dittoGeorge Parks 1967 1968 dittoClifford Pulvermacher 1969 1972 Export Marketing ServiceLaurel Meade 1972 1974 dittoGeorge S Shanklin 1974 Foreign Agricultural ServiceJames Hutchinson 1974 1977 dittoKelly Harrison 1977 1981 dittoAlan Tracy 1981 1982 dittoMelvin Sims 1982 1989 dittoF Paul Dickerson 1989 1991 dittoChristopher E Goldthwait 1991 1993 1993 1999 dittoRichard Fritz 1999 2001 dittoMary T Chambliss 2001 dittoFranklin D Lee 2001 2002 dittoW Kirk Miller 2002 2009 dittoPatricia R Sheikh 2009 dittoJohn D Brewer 2009 dittoChristian Foster 2010 dittoJanet A Nuzum 2010 2011 dittoSuzanne E Heinen 2011 2013 dittoPhilip C Karsting 2013 2014 dittoAsif J Chaudhry 2014 2015 dittoSuzanne Palmieri 2015 2016 dittoAllison Thomas 2016 2017 dittoBryce Quick 2017 dittoBobby Richey 2018 dittoClay Hamilton 2018 2023 dittoBrooke Jamison 2023 dittoHeads of International Development edit Administrators of the Office of International Cooperation and Development and its predecessors from creation until it was merged with FAS in 1994 were periods as acting Administrator are in italics Name Term AgencyMatthew Drosdoff 1964 1966 International Agricultural Development ServiceLester R Brown 1966 1969 dittoQuentin West 1969 1972 Foreign Economic Development ServiceQuentin West 1972 1977 Foreign Development Division Economic Research ServiceQuentin West 1977 1980 Office of International Cooperation and DevelopmentRuth Zagorin 1980 1981 dittoJoan S Wallace 1981 1989 dittoRobert Scherle 1989 1990 dittoSteve Abrams 1990 dittoDuane Acker 1990 1992 dittoJohn Miranda 1992 1993 dittoLynnett M Wagner 1993 1994 dittoAmbassadors edit Agricultural officers who have served or are serving as Ambassadors are Name Agricultural Posts Ambassadorships Presidential Appointments Significant AppointmentsLester D Mallory assistant agricultural commissioner Marseille and Paris agricultural attache Paris and Mexico City Jordan 1953 1958 Guatemala 1958 1959 Deputy Assistant Secretary of State 1960Charles R Burrows assistant agricultural attache rank of vice consul Buenos Aires Honduras 1960 1965Howard R Cottam agricultural economist Paris agricultural attache Rome Kuwait 1963 1969Clarence A Boonstra assistant agricultural attache Havana agricultural attache Manila Buenos Aires Rio de Janeiro and Lima Costa Rica 1967 1969Philip Habib agricultural attache vice consul Ottawa and Wellington South Korea 1971 1974 Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs 1974 1976 Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs 1976 1978 Acting Secretary of State 1977 Special Negotiator for the Middle East 1981 winner of the Presidential Medal of Freedom 1982 featured on a postage stamp 2006H Reiter Webb assistant agricultural attache London agricultural attache Cairo Chief Negotiator for Textile Matters with rank of Ambassador 1979 1981 not confirmed by the Senate George S Vest agricultural attache vice consul Quito European Community 1981 1985 Director General of the Foreign Service 1985 1989Christopher E Goldthwait assistant agricultural attache Bonn agricultural attache and counselor at Lagos Chad 1999 2004Mattie R Sharpless administrative assistant Paris OECD assistant agricultural attache Brussels USEC agricultural attache Bern agricultural counselor Rome agricultural minister counselor Paris Central African Republic 2001 2002Suzanne K Hale agricultural attache and agricultural trade officer Tokyo agricultural minister counselor Beijing and Tokyo Federated States of Micronesia 2004 2007Patricia M Haslach agricultural attache New Delhi Laos 2004 2007 APEC 2008 2009 Coordinator for Assistance Transition in Iraq with ambassadorial rank 2009 2010 Deputy Coordinator for Diplomacy Office of the Coordinator for the Global Hunger and Food Security Initiative 2010 2013 Ethiopia 2013 2016 acting Assistant Secretary of State for Economic and Business Affairs 2016 2018Asif J Chaudhry agricultural attache Warsaw senior agricultural attache counselor and acting minister counselor Moscow agricultural minister counselor Cairo Moldova 2008 2011 Foreign Policy Advisor to the Chief of Naval Operations 2011 2014Allan Mustard agricultural attache Moscow agricultural trade officer Istanbul agricultural counselor Vienna agricultural minister counselor Moscow Mexico City and New Delhi Turkmenistan 2015 2019See also editAgricultural attache Agricultural Trade Act of 1978 Canadian Caper Chief Agricultural Negotiator Commissioner Commodity Credit Corporation Dennis A FitzGerald Foreign Agricultural Trade System of the United States Foreign Market Development Program Iowa Hog Lift Leslie A Wheeler Market Access Program Stanley Andrews Targeted Export Assistance Program Under Secretary of Agriculture for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services Unified Export Strategy United States Department of Agriculture United States Foreign Service Wolf LadejinskyReferences edit FAS Mission Statement Archived from the original on April 8 2010 Retrieved April 10 2010 National Archives Record Group 59 General Records of the Department of State Consular Correspondence 1785 1906 Instructions to Consular Officers Consular Instructions 1800 1906 vol 104 p 99 call number A 1 Entry 59 Official Register of the United States Government 1901 vol 1 p 1094 Moffat s status is attested in the British diplomatic lists in London the Official Register of the United States Government and the State Department Register Clem The U S Agricultural Attache His History and His Work Letter from Secretary Henry C Wallace to the Hon Milton William Shreve May 3 1924 in the National Archives Record Group 16 Records of the Secretary of Agriculture General Correspondence 1906 1970 1924 Box 1032 Papers of Nils Olsen and Reminiscences of Leslie A Wheeler Organization and Functions of the Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations Progress in tariff negotiations is documented in the annual Report of the Secretary of Agriculture for the years 1935 1939 Report of the Secretary of Agriculture 1935 p 6 Reorganization Plan No II Archived April 28 2008 at the Wayback Machine Secretary s Memorandum 825 June 30 1939 National Archives Record Group 16 General Correspondence of the Office of the Secretary of Agriculture 170 6 34 1 Box 3024 and also Reminiscences of Leslie A Wheeler National Archives Record Group 16 Records of the Office of the Secretary of Agriculture General Correspondence 1906 75 Foreign Relations 1940 Box 87 Memorandum for the Secretary June 25 1940 Re Need for clearer publicity on Inter American cartel from Mordecai Ezekial a b Reminiscences of Leslie A Wheeler The United States Farmer and the World Around Him speech by John J Haggerty Director of Foreign Agricultural Relations contained in the Journal of Farm Economics December 1952 Memorandum by Fred J Rossiter Assistant Administrator Foreign Agricultural Service January 26 1954 Secretary s Memorandum 1320 Supplement 1 March 10 1953 Memorandum of Understanding between USDA and Department of State on Conduct of Technical Assistance Overseas April 14 1954 and also Memorandum To All Employees of the Foreign Agricultural Service from acting Administrator Clayton E Whipple November 19 1953 Mustard Allen May 2003 An Unauthorized History of the FAS The Foreign Service Journal Vol 80 no 5 pp 38 39 Archived from the original on August 14 2022 Retrieved December 2 2020 Howard et al Partners in Developing Farm Markets Overseas Commodity Stabilization Service Notice General No 305 June 28 1955 Secretary s Memorandum 1446 February 24 1961 National Archives Record Group 166 Records of the Foreign Agricultural Service Policy Correspondence 1951 1964 Boxes 2 4 6 7 Secretary s Memorandum No 1648 Supplement 1 March 28 1969 Secretary s Memorandum 1833 Supplement 1 February 1 1974 Secretary s Memorandum 2001 November 27 1979 and interview with George Pope former Assistant Administrator for Export Credits Foreign Agricultural Service Interview with George Pope Morgan Merchants of Grain Luttrell The Russian Wheat Deal Hindsight vs Foresight Reprint No 81 Archived July 28 2011 at the Wayback Machine Oral history of R Keith Severin Partially derived from information on the FAS website at USDA Foreign Agricultural Service Food Aid Fish and Seafood Archived from the original on May 15 2009 Retrieved May 31 2009 Interview with Mary T Chambliss former Deputy Administrator for Export Credits Foreign Agricultural Service Personal recollections of Verle Lanier Richard Rortvedt and Mollie Iler augmented by information gleaned from past issues of the FAS Letter and miscellaneous records from the National Archives and Records Administration Interview with Hal G Wynne former budget director Foreign Agricultural Service cited in Mustard Department of Agriculture Reorganization Act of 1994 Rebuilding Agriculture and Food Security in Iraq News About Iraqi Agricultural Reconstruction 2003 Present Archived copy Archived from the original on October 20 2012 Retrieved September 16 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link USDA at Work for Agriculture in Afghanistan November 2010 Archived June 6 2012 at the Wayback Machine Foreign Service Journal May 2009 FAS At a Crossroads Reshaping Ag Diplomacy pp 27 31 Foreign Service Journal May 2009 Archived from the original on May 5 2009 Retrieved May 5 2009 Statement by Michael V Michener Administrator Foreign Agricultural Service U S Department Of Agriculture before the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs Washington DC Tuesday May 19 2009 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 7 2010 Retrieved February 4 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Washington Post Tom Vilsack Leading an Everyday Every Way USDA May 21 2009 1 Archived September 22 2018 at the Wayback Machine Jerry Hagstrom Interagency debate over FAS role heats up Archived June 6 2011 at the Wayback Machine Government Executive October 9 2009 Jerry Hagstrom Conflict Over FAS USAID Roles Clinton Strong Defender of FAS Traditional Purpose Archived June 6 2011 at the Wayback Machine Progressive Farmer October 9 2009 Jerry Hagstrom Lugar questioning FAS role dead link AgWeek October 5 2009 Hagstrom Jerry December 23 2009 Head of Foreign Agricultural Service reassigned Government Executive Archived from the original on June 6 2011 Retrieved December 24 2009 Wheeler Reminiscences and Official Register Official Register Whitley Named Administrator of USDA s Foreign Agricultural Service USDA July 21 2021 Archived from the original on July 24 2021 Retrieved July 24 2021 Bibliography editClem Alan L July 1960 The U S Agricultural Attache His History and His Work FAS M 91 Washington USDA Foreign Agricultural Service Crawford Douglas M 1964 Our Agricultural Attaches Farmer s World Washington U S Govt Print Off Archived from the original on January 10 2016 Retrieved August 23 2010 Estabrook Leon M 1936 Life of an American Memoirs of Leon M Estabrook Washington unpublished manuscript held in Special Collections National Agricultural Library call number 120 Es8 R Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved March 29 2009 FAS Letter Washington newsletter of the Foreign Agricultural Service 1957 1977 Archived from the original on September 27 2009 Howard James O Vernon Harness Jimmy D Minyard Richard E Passig 1989 Partners in Developing Farm Markets Overseas Washington U S Agricultural Export Development Council Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved March 29 2009 Hutson John B 1953 Reminiscences of John B Hutson New York Oral History Collection of Columbia University Archived from the original on July 25 2011 Retrieved June 8 2010 Luttrell Clifton B October 1973 The Russian Wheat Deal Hindsight vs Foresight PDF St Louis Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis Mayer Martin 1983 The Diplomats New York Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 14230 4 Morgan Dan 2000 Merchants of Grain The Power and Profits of the Five Giant Companies at the Center of the World s Food Supply iUniverse p 424 ISBN 978 0 595 14210 1 Mustard Allan 2003 A study of management doctrines and leadership philosophies of selected organizations with international missions Arlington Virginia Foreign Agricultural Service U S Dept of Agriculture pp vi 85 leaves col ill 28 cm Archived from the original on October 19 2015 Retrieved May 31 2009 Official Register of the United States Government Official Register of the United States Government Various Issues Washington USGPO 1883 1885 1889 1891 1893 1899 1901 1903 1905 1907 1925 1959 Olsen Nils Papers of Nils Olsen special collections of the Iowa State University Library unpublished Archived from the original on April 10 2009 Retrieved March 28 2009 Taylor Henry Charles Anne Dewees Taylor 1952 The Story of Agricultural Economics in the United States 1840 1932 Ames Iowa State College Press p 1121 ISBN 978 0 8371 7653 6 Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved March 31 2009 U S Department of Agriculture 1883 1885 Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture Washington USGPO Report of the Secretary of Agriculture U S Department of Agriculture Washington USGPO 1893 1903 1905 1920 1922 1931 1939 1952 1954 U S Department of State Biographic Register Washington USGPO LCCN 09022072 U S Department of State April 19 2006 Foreign Relations of the United States Washington USGPO U S Department of State Foreign Service List Washington USGPO LCCN 10016369 Wheeler Leslie A 1940 Reciprocal Trade Agreements A New Method Of Tariff Making Yearbook of Agriculture 1940 pp 585 595 Washington USGPO permanent dead link Wheeler Leslie A 1952 Reminiscences of Leslie A Wheeler New York Oral History Collection of Columbia University Further reading editU S government websites edit Statutes edit U S Code Title 7 Agriculture Chapter 35A Price Support of Agricultural Commodities PDF Retrieved May 28 2020 Chapter 35A contains Section 416of the Agricultural Act of 1949 7 U S C 1431 the surplus disposal authority making Commodity Credit Corporation owned commodities available for donation to foreign beneficiaries U S Code Title 7 Agriculture Chapter 41 Food for Peace PDF Retrieved May 28 2020 Chapter 41 includes the Food for Peace Act 7 U S C 1691 et seq Food for Progress Act of 1985 7 U S C 1736o McGovern Dole Food for Education Program 7 U S C 1736o 1 Local and Regional Procurement Program 7 U S C 1726c Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust Act 7 U S C 1736f 1 U S Code Title 7 Agriculture Chapter 42 Agricultural Commodity Set Aside Section 1748 Annual reports by agricultural attaches PDF Retrieved May 28 2020 U S Code Title 7 Agriculture Chapter 42 Agricultural Commodity Set Aside Section 1749 Attache educational program PDF Retrieved May 28 2020 U S Code Title 7 Agriculture Chapter 43 Foreign Market Development PDF Retrieved May 28 2020 U S Code Title 7 Agriculture Chapter 87 Export Promotion PDF Retrieved October 24 2012 Basic authority for the Foreign Agricultural Service resides in Subchapter V Foreign Agricultural Service 7USC5692 5695 U S Code Title 7 Sec 3293 Agricultural fellowship program for middle income countries emerging democracies and emerging markets PDF Cochran Fellowship Program authority U S Code Title 19 Customs Duties Sec 2152 Advice from executive departments and other sources PDF Retrieved May 28 2020 President must seek advice of Secretary of Agriculture before signing any trade agreement U S Code Title 19 Customs Duties Chapter 22 Uruguay Round Trade Agreements Subchapter IV Agriculture Related Provisions Sec 3601 3624 PDF Retrieved May 28 2020 U S Code Title 22 Foreign Relations Chapter 52 Foreign Service Sec 3922 Utilization of Foreign Service personnel system by other agencies PDF Retrieved May 28 2020 U S Senate Committee on Agriculture Nutrition and Forestry Compilations of Agricultural Law Index by Subject Retrieved May 28 2020 Federal Regulations edit Code of Federal Regulations Title 7 Agriculture Chapter XIV Commodity Credit Corporation Department of Agriculture Subchapter C Export Programs Retrieved May 28 2020 Code of Federal Regulations Title 7 Agriculture Chapter XV Foreign Agricultural Service Retrieved May 28 2020 Code of Federal Regulations Title 7 Part 1484 RIN 0551 AA96 Foreign Market Development Program PDF Retrieved November 10 2020 Code of Federal Regulations Title 7 Part 1485 RIN 0551 AA97 Market Access Program PDF Retrieved November 10 2020 Departmental Regulations edit USDA Regulations edit Departmental Regulation 1051 001 Coordination of USDA Activities with Foreign Countries PDF Departmental Regulation 1051 002 International Activities and Agreements of USDA Agencies PDF Foreign Affairs Manual edit 15 FAM 260 GUIDELINES FOR ALLOCATING RESIDENTIAL SPACE Other edit National Archives Records of the Foreign Agricultural Service Retrieved March 23 2009 U S Government Accountability Office reports on the Foreign Agricultural Service Retrieved March 25 2009 Other publications and documents edit U S Department of Agriculture Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack Announces Millions to Promote U S Food and Agricultural Exports January 26 2010 Archived from the original on February 3 2010 Retrieved February 3 2010 Congressional Research Service Agricultural Export and Food Aid Programs April 15 2008 Archived from the original on August 7 2011 Retrieved March 24 2009 Congressional Research Service Agricultural Exports and the 2007 Farm Bill October 31 2007 PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 19 2011 Retrieved March 24 2009 AgExporter October 2004 Fighting World Hunger U S Food Aid Policy and the Food for Peace Program PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 7 2009 Retrieved March 26 2009 AgExporter December 2003 In Pursuit of Opportunity FAS and Foreign Market Development PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 7 2009 Retrieved March 26 2009 AgExporter March 2003 Helping U S Producers Feed Clothe and House the World PDF Library of Congress Retrieved March 23 2009 AgExporter March 2003 FAS Attaches U S Agriculture s Eyes and Ears Abroad PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 7 2009 Retrieved March 26 2009 Statement of A Ellen Terpstra Administrator before the House Subcommittee on Agriculture Rural Development Food and Drug Administration and Related Agencies March 5 2003 Archived from the original on March 22 2009 Retrieved March 25 2009 Hanrahan Charles E May 30 2001 IB98006 Agricultural Export and Food Aid Programs CRS Issue Brief for Congress Congressional Research Service Archived from the original on January 9 2009 Retrieved June 6 2010 Senate Report 105 051 Agriculture Rural Development Food and Drug Administration and Related Agencies Appropriation Bill 1998 Archived from the original on January 10 2016 Retrieved March 25 2009 AgExporter November 1 1995 USDA has long history in overseas agricultural development Retrieved March 24 2009 Mission of Foreign Agricultural Service U S Department of Agriculture joint hearings before the Subcommittee on Foreign Agriculture and Hunger of the Committee on Agriculture and the Subcommittee on Information Justice Transportation and Agriculture of the Committee on Government Operations House of Representatives One Hundred Third Congress first session November 10 and 16 1993 1994 ISBN 9780160444661 Retrieved March 26 2009 U S Department of Agriculture Office of Public Affairs Video and Teleconference Division FAS recruiting video from 1990 YouTube Archived from the original on December 13 2021 Retrieved January 20 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link FAS Letter 1957 1977 Archived from the original on September 27 2009 Retrieved October 3 2009 Congressional Record May 26 1954 Statement by the Honorable Congressman Samuel Yorty of California on the need to return agricultural attaches to USDA PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 13 2008 Retrieved March 24 2009 Secretary Benson Creates New Foreign Agricultural Service USDA Press Release 583 53 March 11 1953 PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 13 2008 Retrieved March 24 2009 Organization and Functions of the Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations 1940 Retrieved March 27 2009 Memorandum 804 Describing Functions of the Foreign Agricultural Service January 28 1939 Retrieved March 27 2009 The Foreign Agricultural Service Act of 1930 June 5 1930 Retrieved March 27 2009 The Foreign Crops USDA statistical circular by Charles M Daugherty May 1911 April 1913 Retrieved March 27 2009 Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture 1883 1883 Retrieved May 28 2020 see page 10 for report of posting to London of Edmund Moffat Oral Histories On Line edit Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Oral Histories Retrieved March 23 2009 use the search engine for a Full Text search on Foreign Agricultural Service in quotes Oral History of Stanley Andrews at the Truman Presidential Library Retrieved March 25 2009 Oral History of Dennis A Fitzgerald at the Truman Presidential Library Retrieved March 25 2009 Media Articles chronological order edit Government Executive January 27 2010 Vilsack names more key deputies by Jerry Hagstrom Retrieved February 3 2010 Government Executive October 9 2009 Interagency debate over FAS role heats up by Jerry Hagstrom Retrieved October 10 2009 Progressive Farmer October 9 2009 Conflict Over FAS USAID Roles Clinton Strong Defender of FAS Traditional Purpose by Jerry Hagstrom Retrieved October 10 2009 Lexington Clipper Herald October 5 2009 Smith calls for hearing on new ag export markets by Robert Pore Retrieved October 10 2009 AgWeek October 5 2009 Lugar questioning FAS role by Jerry Hagstrom Retrieved October 10 2009 dead link Foreign Service Journal September 2009 Mission Cleavage p 61 Archived from the original on May 4 2010 Retrieved December 6 2010 Foreign Service Journal May 2009 Hoping for a Break Foreign Trade Agencies Under Pressure pp 15 22 Archived from the original on May 16 2011 Retrieved May 4 2009 Foreign Service Journal May 2009 FAS At a Crossroads Reshaping Ag Diplomacy pp 27 31 Archived from the original on September 16 2011 Retrieved October 13 2011 Foreign Service Journal May 2009 Emerging Challenges Farm Trade in the Age of Globalization pp 32 36 Archived from the original on September 16 2011 Retrieved October 13 2011 AgWeek March 8 2009 A Mess at FAS by Jerry Hagstrom March 2 2009 Foreign Service Journal May 2003 An Unauthorized History of FAS PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 26 2010 Retrieved March 23 2009 Foreign Service Journal May 2003 High Stakes High Hurdles US Farm Trade Policy PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 26 2010 Retrieved March 23 2009 Foreign Service Journal May 2003 The Foreign Agricultural Service Today PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 26 2010 Retrieved March 23 2009 Journal of Farm Economics December 1952 The United States Farmer and the World Around Him Retrieved March 26 2009 Journal of Farm Economics July 1930 News Items Retrieved March 23 2009 External links editOfficial website Foreign Agricultural Service in the Federal Register nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Department of Agriculture nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Archives and Records Administration nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Library of Congress Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Foreign Agricultural Service amp oldid 1188135979, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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