SUMMARY: The Constitutional Interregnum Authority of Tunisia has established its Washington D.C. coordination office to advance Tunisia's constitutional transition and secure critical U.S.-Tunisia strategic partnerships.
We invite elite professional services firms to support high-level government operations including classified legal coordination, executive security protocols, congressional engagement, international AML/CT compliance frameworks, sovereign debt restructuring, asset recovery operations, and bilateral trade facilitation. This engagement is critical to preserving American counter-terrorism partnerships and preventing the collapse of Mediterranean security frameworks that protect U.S. strategic interests.
The Constitutional Interregnum Authority of Tunisia, established under Law No. 47 of 2018 and preparing for the formation of the Council of the Republic of Tunisia, requires immediate professional support through its designated U.S.-registered administrative entity, the Center for Strategic Studies on Tunisia (CSST, EIN: 85-2196249).
Critical operational areas include legal coordination with federal agencies and congressional offices, executive-level security protocols and threat assessment capabilities, international policy facilitation across State Department and Treasury channels, comprehensive AML/CT compliance documentation for Tunisia FATF audit preparation, sovereign financial restructuring advisory, cross-border asset recovery coordination, and strategic communications management.
The Constitutional Interregnum Authority is led by Olfa Hamdi, a dual U.S.-Tunisian citizen and former Tunisair CEO with extensive experience in Tunisian defense and security institutions.
Ms. Hamdi's dual citizenship ensures full compliance with U.S. constitutional protections while maintaining legitimate authority under Tunisian constitutional law, providing unique legal standing for U.S.-Tunisia governmental coordination.
The European Commission's Directorate-General for Financial Stability (FISMA) maintains active coordination with Ms. Hamdi's constitutional authority on Tunisia's AML/CFT compliance framework and FATF audit preparation, establishing operational partnerships for the constitutional transition process.
We invite firms and individuals with demonstrated experience in foreign government representation, active security clearance capacity, applicable FARA compliance capability, proven AML/CT regulatory expertise, established Washington D.C. networks across federal agencies and Congress, and documented track record in constitutional transitions or high-level governance advisory.
Priority consideration will be given to candidates with existing counter-terrorism, financial crimes, or national security portfolios.
All engagements must comply with the Foreign Agents Registration Act (22 U.S.C. § 611 et seq.), Anti-Money Laundering statutes (31 U.S.C. § 5311 et seq.), Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (28 U.S.C. § 1602 et seq.), International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. § 1701 et seq.), and applicable provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act (115 Stat. 272).
Firms engaging with constitutional authorities must ensure full compliance with Bank Secrecy Act reporting requirements, Treasury sanctions protocols, and DOJ foreign agent disclosure obligations.
Failure to comply with applicable federal registration and disclosure requirements may result in criminal liability under 22 U.S.C. § 618 and civil penalties under related statutes.
Interested parties must submit a comprehensive letter of interest outlining relevant experience and proposed service areas, detailed credentials summary including key personnel qualifications and relevant case studies, complete conflict of interest disclosure regarding any existing Tunisia-related or regional engagements, and security clearance status of principal staff.
This solicitation is issued under authority of Tunisia's Law No. 47 of 2018 by the Constitutional Interregnum Authority of Tunisia. All potential engagements remain subject to legal review under applicable Tunisian and U.S. law, constitutional authority approval processes, compliance with relevant U.S. registration requirements, and constitutional appropriation procedures.
The Constitutional Interregnum Authority reserves the right to reject any or all expressions of interest and to modify scope or requirements as constitutional circumstances require.
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Published under constitutional authority of Law No. 47 of 2018 and U.S. regulatory framework governing 501(c)(4) organizations under 26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(4) and related Treasury regulations
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