HR-4531-119
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Sponsored by Jefferson Shreve (R-IN)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of State to submit a comprehensive strategy to Congress within 180 days of enactment for countering Iran's and Hezbollah's influence operations in Latin America. The strategy would be required to address Iranian cultural centers, travel restrictions on Iranian emissaries, intelligence capacity-building, disruption of Iranian and Hezbollah media platforms (HispanTV and Al Mayadeen Español), and potential terrorist designations for Iran's Al Mustafa International University network. The strategy would be submitted in unclassified form to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, with an optional classified annex.
Who benefits
U.S. national security and intelligence agencies that would receive a clearer strategic mandate. Latin American governments and civil society organizations that view Iranian and Hezbollah networks as destabilizing. Jewish communities and other groups in Latin America that have been targets of Hezbollah-linked attacks, such as the 1994 AMIA bombing in Argentina. U.S. allies in the region who seek a more coordinated American counterterrorism posture. Congressional oversight committees that would gain a formal, unclassified strategy document.
Who is hurt
Iranian diplomatic and cultural personnel who could face expanded visa denials or travel restrictions. Entities affiliated with Al Mustafa International University, which could face terrorist designations. Broadcasters and audiences of HispanTV and Al Mayadeen Español, whose platforms could face sanctions or disruption. Academic institutions and NGOs in Latin America that partner with Iranian-linked organizations and could face increased U.S. intelligence scrutiny. The State Department, which would bear the administrative burden of producing the strategy within 180 days.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Iran and Hezbollah have maintained documented, decades-long networks in Latin America — including financing, recruitment, and propaganda operations — and that the U.S. has lacked a coherent, publicly accountable strategy to address them. They point to the 1994 AMIA bombing in Buenos Aires, attributed to Hezbollah with Iranian backing, and to Treasury and State Department designations of Hezbollah financial networks operating through the region as evidence of a real and ongoing threat. They contend that requiring a formal, unclassified strategy strengthens congressional oversight and forces a coordinated interagency response to a documented national security gap.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating a public strategy with specific elements — including potential terrorist designations for educational institutions and disruption of foreign media — could constrain diplomatic flexibility and escalate tensions with Latin American governments that maintain independent relationships with Iran. They contend that broad intelligence monitoring of academic institutions and NGOs risks chilling legitimate civil society activity and raises due process concerns for entities that could be designated without judicial review. Critics may also argue that the bill's 180-day deadline and prescriptive content requirements limit the executive branch's ability to tailor a strategy to evolving, classified intelligence.