S-4633-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by David McCormick (R-PA)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with military commanders, the State Department, and the Department of Homeland Security, to develop a comprehensive strategy for deploying unmanned and autonomous systems (drones, undersea vehicles, and related technologies) in the Indo-Pacific region and the Western Hemisphere. The strategy would cover capability gaps, basing locations, allied co-development, supply chain vulnerabilities, and counter-narcotics missions, and must be submitted to Congress within 180 days of enactment. The Secretary would then provide annual briefings to congressional defense committees through 2030 on implementation progress.
Who benefits
U.S. defense contractors and manufacturers of unmanned systems and autonomous technologies who may see increased procurement. Allies and partners named in the bill — Australia, Israel, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Ukraine — who would gain co-development and interoperability opportunities. U.S. military personnel who would operate with more clearly defined doctrine and equipment. Border and coastal communities that could benefit from improved counter-narcotics and counter-trafficking surveillance. Congressional defense committees, which gain structured oversight and annual briefings. Domestic drone and AI technology companies positioned to supply military-grade systems.
Who is hurt
Foreign-manufactured drone component suppliers — particularly Chinese-linked entities — who would be excluded under supply chain restrictions tied to the American Security Drone Act of 2023. U.S. companies currently reliant on foreign-sourced components who may face higher domestic sourcing costs. Taxpayers who may bear costs of any procurement and deployment programs that follow from the strategy. Civil liberties and privacy advocates concerned about expanded autonomous surveillance infrastructure near U.S. borders and in the Western Hemisphere. Countries in the Western Hemisphere not named as partners who may view expanded U.S. autonomous systems presence as a sovereignty concern.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that China and other adversaries have rapidly expanded their unmanned systems capabilities, and that the U.S. lacks a coherent, theater-wide strategy to counter them — a gap this bill directly addresses. They contend that the bill's emphasis on allied co-development with partners like Japan, Australia, and Ukraine reflects lessons from recent conflicts, where drone warfare has proven decisive, and that integrating autonomous systems into counter-narcotics operations could reduce the human cost of those missions. The bipartisan sponsorship by Senators McCormick and Fetterman, they argue, reflects broad consensus that autonomous systems are a critical national security priority.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating a strategy document does not guarantee resources, accountability, or meaningful change — and that without accompanying appropriations, the bill may produce a report that sits unused. They contend that expanding autonomous systems into counter-narcotics and homeland security missions raises serious questions about civilian oversight, rules of engagement, and the risk of mission creep into domestic surveillance, particularly given the bill's inclusion of U.S. Northern Command, which operates within U.S. borders. Critics may also argue that naming specific allied partners — including Taiwan — in statute could unnecessarily constrain diplomatic flexibility or escalate tensions with China.