HR-2505-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
Sponsored by William Keating (D-MA)
What it does
This bill would require three federal departments — Commerce, State, and Defense — to each develop separate strategies to prevent Iran from acquiring technologies used to build and operate drones (unmanned aircraft systems, or UAS). The Commerce Department would develop a strategy to stop illegal exports of specific components (such as microcontrollers, voltage regulators, and microprocessors) to Iran. The State Department would develop a strategy covering exports from both the U.S. and allied countries. The Defense Department would develop a range of military options to counter or deny Iran's ability to acquire these technologies, including software and manufacturing equipment.
Who benefits
U.S. and allied military personnel who face Iranian-made drones in conflict zones (e.g., Ukraine, the Middle East). U.S. allies and partners targeted by Iranian drone attacks, including Israel and Ukraine. Defense contractors and technology firms that may be engaged to support countermeasures. Intelligence and export-control agencies that would receive clearer mandates. Civilians in regions where Iranian drones have been used in attacks.
Who is hurt
U.S. technology exporters and manufacturers of microcontrollers, microprocessors, and related components who may face additional compliance burdens or export restrictions. Allied-country firms that export dual-use electronics and could face new diplomatic pressure or restrictions. Countries that trade with Iran and may be pressured to align with U.S. export controls. Iranian civilian industries that rely on the same dual-use components for non-military purposes.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Iranian-made drones — built using smuggled Western components — have caused documented casualties in Ukraine and across the Middle East, and that existing export controls have failed to stop the flow of these parts. They contend that requiring coordinated, multi-agency strategies closes a gap between Commerce enforcement, State Department diplomacy, and Defense Department operations, and that the bill's focus on allied-country exports addresses a known loophole through which components reach Iran via third-party countries.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill requires only the development of plans and strategies — not their implementation — meaning it may produce reports without changing actual policy or stopping a single component from reaching Iran. They contend that existing authorities under the Export Administration Regulations and International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) already empower these agencies to act, and that adding new planning mandates without enforcement mechanisms or dedicated funding risks duplicating bureaucratic effort rather than producing measurable results.