HR-7668-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Sponsored by Joe Wilson (R-SC)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of State to submit a classified report to Congress examining Russian and Chinese influence and intelligence activity in the country of Georgia. It would also require the State Department to submit a strategy for strengthening U.S.-Georgia bilateral ties, an assessment of the resources needed to carry out that strategy, and a determination of whether the United States should continue to support its partnership with Georgia and Georgian projects.
Who benefits
Members of Congress who would gain classified intelligence assessments to inform foreign policy decisions. U.S. policymakers and national security officials who would have a formal strategic framework for engaging Georgia. Georgian government officials and civil society groups who favor closer U.S. ties. U.S. businesses and NGOs operating in Georgia who could benefit from a clearer U.S. policy posture. Think tanks and defense contractors involved in Caucasus regional security.
Who is hurt
The State Department and relevant intelligence agencies, which would bear the administrative and resource costs of producing the classified report and strategy. Chinese and Russian government interests that benefit from reduced U.S. scrutiny of their activities in Georgia. Georgian political factions aligned with Russia or China that prefer less U.S. engagement. Taxpayers who would bear any costs associated with the reporting and strategy development, though these are likely modest.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that China and Russia have significantly expanded their economic and political footprint in Georgia — a strategically located country at the crossroads of Europe and Asia — and that Congress currently lacks a comprehensive, classified picture of those activities. They contend that requiring a formal strategy forces the executive branch to articulate clear U.S. interests in the region, ensuring Georgia does not fall further into Russian or Chinese spheres of influence by default rather than by deliberate policy choice.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill is largely duplicative of existing intelligence and diplomatic reporting mechanisms, and that the State Department already monitors foreign influence in Georgia through routine channels. They contend that mandating a formal classified report and strategy consumes limited diplomatic and intelligence resources without guaranteeing any policy change, and that the bill's requirement to assess "whether the U.S. should continue to invest" in Georgia could signal uncertainty to allies and adversaries alike about U.S. commitment to the region.