HR-1841-119
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Sponsored by Brad Sherman (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of State to conduct a review of current restrictions on U.S. nationals traveling to North Korea and submit a report to Congress within 180 days, including whether family visits for funerals and religious events should qualify as humanitarian exceptions. It would also require the Secretary of State to submit a report outlining a roadmap for negotiating a formal peace agreement to end the Korean War. Additionally, the bill expresses Congress's view that the U.S. should seek to establish diplomatic liaison offices in Washington and Pyongyang.
Who benefits
Korean Americans with relatives in North Korea — estimated at approximately 100,000 people — who may gain expanded ability to visit family for funerals, burials, and religious events. Families separated since the Korean War era. Diplomats, journalists, academics, and humanitarian aid workers who may benefit from a broader definition of permissible travel. U.S. businesses that could eventually benefit from normalized relations if diplomatic engagement succeeds. South Korean allies who have expressed interest in a formal peace framework.
Who is hurt
Human rights advocates who argue that engagement with North Korea legitimizes its government without securing concessions on political prisoners or nuclear weapons. U.S. allies — particularly Japan and South Korea — who may have concerns about the pace or terms of any diplomatic normalization. Americans who could travel to North Korea under expanded rules and face detention risks, as North Korea has previously detained U.S. citizens. Defense and intelligence communities that may view liaison offices as a counterintelligence risk.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the 1953 armistice has left the Korean Peninsula in a legal state of war for over 70 years, and that the absence of formal relations has concrete humanitarian costs — roughly 100,000 Americans cannot visit dying or deceased relatives in North Korea. They contend that both the Biden and Trump administrations expressed openness to the Singapore framework and Panmunjom Declaration, demonstrating bipartisan recognition that diplomacy is necessary, and that requiring only a review and a roadmap report — not a treaty or policy change — is a modest, measured step toward accountability.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that diplomatic engagement without preconditions rewards North Korea's ongoing nuclear and ballistic missile programs, which the bill itself acknowledges "continue to pose a threat to international peace and security." They contend that establishing liaison offices or easing travel restrictions could provide North Korea with propaganda value, intelligence opportunities, and hard currency, while past summits — including the 2019 Hanoi Summit cited in the bill — collapsed precisely because North Korea refused to link denuclearization to sanctions relief, suggesting a roadmap report will not overcome this fundamental impasse.