S-4077-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Tom Cotton (R-AR)
What it does
This bill would require any motor carrier (trucking company) transporting Department of Defense freight to certify that it has no ownership, control, or significant business relationships with entities on the Pentagon's list of Chinese military companies. It would also create a new "Secure Defense Freight Carrier Registry" — a pre-approved list of carriers eligible to bid on DoD freight contracts — administered jointly by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration and the Department of Defense. Carriers would need to pass enhanced national security vetting and re-vet every two years to remain on the registry, and the requirement would flow down to all subcontractors and owner-operators at every tier.
Who benefits
U.S.-owned and operated trucking companies with no foreign adversary ties, who would gain a competitive advantage in DoD contracting. The Department of Defense and military logistics operations, which would have greater assurance about the security of their supply chains. Defense-focused freight brokers and logistics firms that already meet security standards. Domestic transportation workers whose employers are registry-eligible. Communities near military installations that depend on secure logistics operations.
Who is hurt
Motor carriers with any ownership stake, investor relationship, or business tie to Chinese-listed entities — even indirect or minor ones — who could be disqualified from DoD contracts. Small trucking companies and independent owner-operators who may lack the administrative resources to navigate enhanced vetting, certification, and recordkeeping requirements. Carriers currently performing DoD freight work who would face a one-year transition deadline to achieve registry status or lose eligibility. Subcontractors and brokers several tiers removed from the prime contract who may be unaware of the new requirements. The Department of Defense itself could face short-term capacity constraints if a significant share of current carriers cannot qualify.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the U.S. military's surface freight supply chain is a critical vulnerability — adversary-linked carriers could surveil troop movements, equipment transfers, or sensitive cargo routes. They contend that the existing DoD contractor vetting system does not systematically screen motor carriers for Chinese military company affiliations, leaving a gap that this bill closes. Given that the Pentagon's own Section 1260H list identifies dozens of Chinese military-linked companies with broad commercial operations, supporters argue that a certification and registry system is a proportionate, targeted response to a documented national security risk.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's definition of "significant business relationships" is left entirely to regulatory discretion, creating legal uncertainty that could ensnare carriers with routine, arms-length commercial ties to Chinese-linked firms — such as equipment leases or fuel supply contracts — rather than genuine security threats. They contend that the one-year implementation timeline and multi-tier flow-down requirements could disrupt existing DoD freight contracts and reduce the pool of available carriers, potentially raising transportation costs for the military. Critics may also argue that the bill duplicates existing vetting mechanisms without demonstrating that current processes have produced actual security failures.