HRES-64-119
Ordered to be Reported by the Yeas and Nays: 43 - 3.
Sponsored by Thomas Suozzi (D-NY)
What it does
This resolution would formally express the sense of the House of Representatives that the U.S.-Republic of Korea alliance is important to Indo-Pacific security. It would reaffirm existing treaty commitments, highlight economic and cultural ties, celebrate Korean American contributions, and express support for Korean Culture-Kimchi Day. As a simple House resolution (H. Res.), it would not create new law, appropriate funds, or impose any legal obligations.
Who benefits
The Republic of Korea government, which receives a formal congressional endorsement of the alliance. Korean Americans (over 2 million people), who are recognized for their contributions. U.S. defense contractors and military personnel stationed in South Korea, whose mission receives symbolic congressional backing. U.S. exporters and businesses with South Korean trade relationships, who benefit from a reaffirmed stable alliance. Advocates for a strong U.S. presence in the Indo-Pacific region.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct material harm from a non-binding resolution. Those who favor reducing U.S. military commitments abroad or renegotiating the terms of the alliance may view the resolution as foreclosing political space for those discussions. North Korea and adversarial actors in the region may view the resolution as an unfavorable diplomatic signal, though it carries no legal force.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the U.S.-South Korea alliance is one of the most consequential security partnerships in the world, underpinned by the 1953 Mutual Defense Treaty and over 28,000 U.S. troops stationed on the peninsula. They contend that a formal congressional affirmation sends a clear deterrence signal to North Korea and regional adversaries at a moment of heightened nuclear tension, and that the resolution appropriately recognizes South Korea's role as the seventh-largest U.S. trading partner, with $91.3 billion in U.S. exports in 2023 alone.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a non-binding resolution risks constraining future diplomatic flexibility without any corresponding legal commitment from South Korea, effectively giving a symbolic blank check to alliance terms that may need renegotiation. They contend that Congress should use binding legislation or treaty review — not symbolic resolutions — if it genuinely wants to shape alliance policy, and that the resolution's broad affirmations could be cited selectively to resist any future reassessment of troop levels, cost-sharing agreements, or strategic posture in the region.