S-4421-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Sponsored by Ruben Gallego (D-AZ)
What it does
This bill would amend the Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA) to expand Congress's ability to review and potentially block executive actions that modify or lift sanctions on Russia. It would specifically add energy-related sanctions — covering crude oil, petroleum products, natural gas, and other Russian-origin energy products — to the list of actions subject to congressional review. The review period for energy-related sanctions would remain in effect until the Secretary of State certifies, in consultation with other senior officials, that Russia has ended its war in Ukraine and credibly committed to a just peace settlement that includes compensating Ukraine for war damages. The bill also creates narrow exceptions allowing energy-related licensing actions to proceed without congressional review in emergencies, such as protecting the health or safety of a vessel crew, emergency repairs, or urgent economic mitigation in a third country.
Who benefits
Ukraine and its government, which would benefit from a stronger U.S. commitment to maintaining sanctions pressure. U.S. and allied energy producers who compete with Russian oil and gas exports and would benefit from continued restrictions on Russian energy. Members of Congress seeking greater oversight authority over executive foreign policy decisions. European allies and other countries that have aligned their sanctions policies with the U.S. and could face diplomatic complications if U.S. sanctions were eased unilaterally. Domestic natural gas exporters who may gain market share if Russian energy remains sanctioned.
Who is hurt
The executive branch, which would lose flexibility to adjust Russia-related energy sanctions without congressional review. U.S. companies holding or seeking licenses to engage in limited transactions involving Russian energy, who would face greater regulatory uncertainty. Third-country importers of Russian energy who depend on U.S. licensing exceptions for economic stability. Shipping and logistics companies that transport Russian energy products and rely on licensing flexibility. Consumers in countries that depend on Russian energy and could face supply disruptions if sanctions are tightened or licensing exceptions are restricted.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Russia's ongoing war in Ukraine makes it essential that Congress — not the executive branch alone — control any relaxation of sanctions, particularly on energy, which is Russia's primary source of war revenue. They contend that existing CAATSA review mechanisms were not designed to cover executive orders like EO 14024, leaving a gap that the executive could exploit to ease pressure on Russia without legislative input. Supporters point to the bipartisan sponsorship of the bill as evidence of broad consensus that sanctions relief should require a credible, verified peace settlement — not unilateral executive discretion.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that tying the President's hands on sanctions — especially with a certification requirement linked to a subjective standard like a "just peace settlement" — could undermine the executive's ability to use sanctions as a flexible diplomatic tool to negotiate an end to the conflict. They contend that rigid congressional review requirements may slow the U.S. response to rapidly changing battlefield or diplomatic conditions, and that the certification threshold, including Ukraine war damage compensation, may be so high as to make sanctions relief practically impossible, removing a key incentive for Russia to negotiate.