HR-9241-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Abraham Hamadeh (R-AZ)
What it does
This bill would amend Title 10 of the U.S. Code to require the Secretary of Defense to submit detailed reports to Congress within 60 days of any significant troop withdrawal or repositioning, covering the inventory, disposition plans, and diversion-risk assessments for all accountable military equipment in the affected theater. It would require senior-level (Secretary or Deputy Secretary) written approval before abandoning, destroying, or demilitarizing equipment worth more than $10 million in aggregate. It would also mandate annual reports for five years, event-triggered notifications when equipment is diverted or used in attacks, a GAO review of implementation, and an initial baseline report within 180 days of enactment.
Who benefits
Congressional defense committees, which would gain significantly more visibility into equipment disposition decisions. U.S. taxpayers broadly, who funded the equipment and bear the cost of replacement. Ally and partner nations whose forces could be better protected from adversaries using diverted U.S. equipment. Civilian populations in conflict zones who may be targeted with diverted weapons. The Government Accountability Office, which gains a formal oversight role. Defense contractors who may benefit from retrograde or resale of equipment rather than abandonment. Future U.S. service members who could face reduced risk from adversaries armed with diverted U.S. weapons.
Who is hurt
The Department of Defense and combatant commanders, who would face new administrative and reporting burdens during already complex withdrawal operations. Senior military and civilian officials who could face greater personal accountability for disposition decisions. Allies and partner forces whose equipment transfers may be slowed or subjected to additional scrutiny. Operational planners who may have less flexibility in fast-moving withdrawal scenarios where 60-day reporting timelines are difficult to meet. Contractors and logistics personnel who would need to support expanded inventory tracking systems.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the 2021 Afghanistan withdrawal left an estimated $7.1 billion in U.S.-funded defense equipment — including over 2,000 armored vehicles and dozens of aircraft — in Taliban hands, and that the 2014 Iraq withdrawal enabled ISIL to capture approximately 2,300 Humvees, some of which were converted into suicide car bombs used against U.S. partners. They contend that existing DoD accountability frameworks lacked the systemic integration to give Congress timely, comprehensive data, and that mandatory senior-level approval and structured reporting would close those gaps before the next withdrawal, not after.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that imposing rigid 60-day reporting requirements and senior-level approval thresholds could slow or complicate time-sensitive withdrawal operations where battlefield conditions change faster than bureaucratic timelines allow. They contend that the bill's detailed reporting mandates may create a false sense of oversight security — since the Afghanistan and Iraq equipment losses occurred despite existing accountability rules — and that the real problem is enforcement and resourcing, not the absence of additional statutory reporting layers that add administrative burden without guaranteeing better outcomes.