HR-9322-119
Referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs, and in addition to the Committee on Armed Services, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by Jimmy Panetta (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Defense to create the "United States-Abraham Accords Defense Cooperation Initiative," a formal program to strengthen military ties between the U.S. and countries that signed or joined the Abraham Accords — a set of normalization agreements between Israel and several Arab nations beginning in 2020. The initiative would focus on joint military capabilities including air defense, counter-drone systems, intelligence sharing, and special operations. Within 60 days of enactment, the Secretary would be required to submit a strategy and funding estimate to the Armed Services Committees, and Congress would express its preference that participating countries contribute matching funds.
Who benefits
U.S. defense contractors and weapons manufacturers who may receive new contracts for joint military systems. Israel, the UAE, Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan, and any other countries that have normalized relations with Israel since 2020, who would gain formalized U.S. military cooperation. U.S. military planners seeking a structured regional security architecture in the Middle East. Countries in the region that view Iran as a threat. U.S. service members and intelligence personnel who would gain new training and interoperability partners. Indirectly, civilian populations in the region who may benefit from reduced conflict if deterrence succeeds.
Who is hurt
Countries not included in the initiative — particularly those that have not normalized relations with Israel — who may perceive the framework as exclusionary or as a signal of reduced U.S. engagement with them. Palestinian political leadership, who may view the deepening of Abraham Accords military ties as reducing leverage for a future Palestinian state. Iran and its regional allies, who are explicitly named as the adversary the initiative is designed to deter. U.S. taxpayers, who would bear costs if matching funds from partner nations are insufficient. Congressional appropriators, whose discretion over future defense spending could be constrained by the initiative's structure.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Abraham Accords created a historic opening for regional security cooperation that the U.S. has not yet fully institutionalized, leaving a strategic gap that Iran and its proxies could exploit. They contend that formalizing defense cooperation — particularly on air defense, counter-drone systems, and intelligence sharing — directly addresses the threat demonstrated by Iran's April 2024 direct missile and drone attack on Israel, in which Abraham Accords partners played a coordinating role. They further argue that the matching-funds provision ensures partner nations share the financial burden, limiting costs to U.S. taxpayers.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that codifying a military alliance around the Abraham Accords could entangle the U.S. in regional conflicts it did not explicitly authorize, effectively expanding U.S. security commitments without a formal treaty ratified by the Senate as required by Article II. They contend that explicitly naming Iran as the target of deterrence could escalate tensions and foreclose diplomatic options, and that the bill's open-ended definition of "Abraham Accords country" — including any nation that has "sought to normalize" relations with Israel — gives the executive branch broad, loosely defined authority to expand the initiative's membership without further congressional approval.