S-4544-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by John Cornyn (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Defense to submit a report to congressional defense committees within 180 days of enactment. The report would detail existing Department of Defense activities aimed at disrupting transnational criminal organizations that steal and smuggle crude oil and refined petroleum products, and would include recommendations for future non-kinetic countermeasures such as partner-nation capacity building and interagency information sharing. The bill also expresses the sense of Congress that cartel hydrocarbon smuggling should be treated as a priority national security threat.
Who benefits
U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies that would gain a consolidated DoD assessment of cartel fuel-smuggling networks. The Mexican government and Pemex, whose lost revenues (estimated at ~$24 million per day in tax losses) could be reduced if countermeasures follow. Legitimate U.S. petroleum importers in Texas who compete against complicit importers receiving stolen crude. Communities in Mexico harmed by cartel violence funded partly through fuel theft. U.S. border-region communities affected by cartel activity more broadly. Congressional defense committees seeking oversight of DoD counter-cartel activities.
Who is hurt
U.S.-based importers currently receiving smuggled crude oil — primarily those operating in the Lower Rio Grande Valley, Eagle Ford Shale, and Permian Basin regions — who could face increased scrutiny and enforcement. Mexican cartels (CJNG, Sinaloa, Gulf, Northeast) whose fuel-theft revenue streams could be targeted. Pemex employees who participate in bribery schemes. Indirectly, DoD personnel and resources that may be redirected toward hydrocarbon monitoring missions if the report's recommendations are acted upon.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that cartel fuel theft has reached an extraordinary scale — nearly 987 million liters stolen from Pemex in 2024 alone, nearly triple the 2019 volume — and that this revenue directly funds fentanyl trafficking and cartel violence affecting the United States. They contend that DoD already possesses surveillance and monitoring infrastructure built for counterdrug missions that is directly applicable to hydrocarbon smuggling, making this a low-cost, high-value use of existing capabilities. A report is a necessary first step to close a documented gap in the U.S. counter-cartel strategy.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that requiring a Pentagon report on what is fundamentally a law enforcement and customs matter risks further militarizing a problem better addressed by the DEA, DHS, and Treasury — agencies that have already conducted sanctions actions against CJNG fuel networks in 2024 and 2025. They contend that expanding DoD's counter-cartel mandate beyond narcotics to include commodity smuggling could set a broad precedent for military involvement in civilian economic crimes, and that the report's recommendations may generate pressure for mission creep without clear statutory limits or additional oversight mechanisms.