S-3981-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Sponsored by Chris Van Hollen (D-MD)
What it does
This bill would make three main changes to U.S. policy toward Burma (Myanmar). First, it would extend the expiration date of the Burma Unified through Rigorous Military Accountability Act of 2022 from 8 years to 10 years, keeping existing sanctions authority in place longer. Second, it would require the President to annually determine whether specific Burmese entities — including state-owned enterprises, Myanma Economic Bank, and foreign companies operating in Burma's jet fuel sector — meet the criteria for U.S. sanctions, and report those findings to Congress. Third, it would create a U.S. Special Envoy for Burma, appointed by the Secretary of State, to coordinate sanctions policy, pursue multilateral pressure on the Burmese military, and engage Burmese civil society and democratic groups.
Who benefits
Burmese pro-democracy groups, civil society organizations, ethnic minority communities (including Rohingya), and political prisoners who may benefit from increased U.S. diplomatic pressure on the military junta. Nongovernmental organizations operating in Burma and neighboring countries that would receive more coordinated U.S. support. Refugees and displaced persons in Bangladesh, India, and the broader region who could benefit from more focused U.S. engagement. U.S. foreign policy professionals who would gain a dedicated coordination mechanism. Neighboring countries (India, Bangladesh, Thailand) that may benefit from a more coherent U.S. regional strategy addressing cross-border threats like narcotics trafficking and refugee flows.
Who is hurt
Foreign companies — particularly those in China, Russia, and Southeast Asia — operating in Burma's jet fuel sector who could face new U.S. sanctions exposure under the expanded annual review requirement. The Burmese military junta (State Administration Council/State Security and Peace Commission) and its economic interests, including state-owned enterprises. Myanma Economic Bank, which would face mandatory annual sanctions review. U.S. businesses or financial institutions with indirect exposure to Burmese state entities that could be caught in expanded sanctions. The IMF shareholding provision could limit Burma's voting weight and access to Fund resources, indirectly affecting ordinary Burmese citizens who depend on IMF-supported programs.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Burmese military's 2021 coup has produced one of the world's worst humanitarian crises, with over 3 million internally displaced persons and systematic atrocities against ethnic minorities documented by the UN Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar. They contend that the existing BURMA Act's 8-year sunset is insufficient given the junta's entrenched position, and that a dedicated Special Envoy — modeled on similar positions used effectively in other conflict zones — would close a critical coordination gap that has allowed the military to continue receiving jet fuel and financial support from third-country actors, including Chinese and Russian entities, with limited U.S. diplomatic response.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding sanctions and diplomatic pressure on Burma has produced little measurable change in military behavior since the 2021 coup, and that adding a Special Envoy and mandatory reporting requirements layers bureaucracy onto a policy that has not demonstrated effectiveness. They contend that the jet fuel sanctions provision could strain relations with Southeast Asian partners whose cooperation is needed on broader regional priorities, and that the IMF shareholding restriction — applied to a country already experiencing severe economic collapse — may deepen civilian suffering without meaningfully constraining the military, which has historically insulated itself from economic pressure.