HR-9242-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Abraham Hamadeh (R-AZ)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Defense to submit a report to congressional defense committees within 180 days of enactment. The report would assess how the Department of Defense supports the recovery, repatriation, and accounting of U.S. nationals who are held hostage, unlawfully detained, missing, or deceased abroad — particularly in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, and parts of Africa. The bill also expresses Congress's view that the U.S. should evaluate creating a formal "No American Left Behind" doctrine to guide these efforts.
Who benefits
U.S. nationals currently held hostage, unlawfully detained, or missing abroad, and their families, who would benefit from increased congressional oversight and potential policy improvements. Congress would gain greater visibility into DoD's recovery planning and any gaps in authority or resources. Veterans' and hostage advocacy organizations that have long pushed for stronger government accountability on these cases. Families of deceased service members and civilians whose remains have not been recovered.
Who is hurt
Foreign adversaries and non-state actors who benefit from opacity in U.S. recovery capabilities could face increased pressure if the report leads to policy changes. The classified annex requirement could create administrative burden for DoD. Diplomatic negotiations in sensitive ongoing cases could be complicated if the unclassified portions of the report reveal U.S. operational constraints or intelligence gaps. Detainees held by U.S. partners whose status is linked to U.S. recovery equities could be affected by any resulting policy shifts.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Americans like Kayla Mueller, Austin Tice, and others have been held or killed abroad while government recovery efforts remained fragmented and under-resourced, and that Congress has a constitutional duty to ensure DoD is planning and resourcing these missions effectively. They contend that a formal report will surface statutory gaps, intelligence shortfalls, and coordination failures that have historically hindered recovery outcomes, and that establishing a codified doctrine — as some allied nations have done — would deter adversaries from targeting U.S. nationals in the first place.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating a detailed report on recovery criteria, intelligence methods, and operational constraints — even with a classified annex — risks exposing sensitive information that adversaries could exploit to make future hostage-taking more effective or rescue operations more dangerous. They contend that the existing Hostage Recovery Fusion Cell framework, established under the Robert Levinson Act, already provides the interagency coordination this bill seeks to study, and that adding a new reporting requirement duplicates oversight mechanisms without meaningfully improving outcomes for Americans held abroad.