HR-6230-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Sponsored by Keith Self (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of State to determine, within 90 days of enactment, whether specific individuals and entities named in the bill are already subject to existing U.S. sanctions — including those targeting terrorism, human rights abuses, corruption, and Iran-specific activity. The State Department would then repeat this review every 180 days for up to six years and submit its findings to Congress each time.
Who benefits
U.S. policymakers and Congress, who would receive regular, structured information about whether named targets are covered by existing sanctions. Advocates for stronger Iran policy who would gain a formal accountability mechanism. Victims of Iranian-linked violence or human rights abuses who may benefit from increased scrutiny of perpetrators. Allied governments and international partners who coordinate sanctions regimes with the U.S.
Who is hurt
The specific individuals and entities named in the bill, who would face heightened government scrutiny and potential public exposure. The State Department, which would bear the administrative burden of conducting and reporting these reviews on a recurring basis. Diplomatic efforts that rely on quiet engagement with Iran, which could be complicated by mandatory public reporting cycles. U.S. businesses or individuals with lawful ties to named entities who may face reputational or compliance uncertainty.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that existing sanctions authorities are vast but inconsistently applied, and that a structured, mandatory review process ensures named bad actors do not fall through the cracks due to bureaucratic inertia. They contend that periodic congressional reporting creates accountability and transparency, making it harder for the executive branch to deprioritize enforcement against individuals linked to Iranian-sponsored incitement or violence.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating rigid, public review cycles constrains the executive branch's flexibility to conduct nuanced, confidential diplomacy with Iran and could telegraph U.S. enforcement priorities to sanctioned targets. They contend that the State Department already has authority and incentive to apply existing sanctions appropriately, making the reporting requirement a duplicative administrative burden that may produce little actionable new information.