S-4665-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Sponsored by John Curtis (R-UT)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of State to submit a comprehensive written strategy to Congress within 180 days of enactment for countering Iranian and Hezbollah influence operations in Latin America. The strategy must address five specific areas: limiting Iranian cultural centers, restricting travel of Iranian emissaries, strengthening U.S. intelligence capacity, disrupting Iranian and Hezbollah Spanish-language media platforms (HispanTV and Al Mayadeen Español), and developing a plan to potentially designate Iran's Al Mustafa International University network as a foreign terrorist organization. The strategy would be submitted in unclassified form with an optional classified annex.
Who benefits
U.S. national security and intelligence agencies, which would receive a formal strategic framework for coordinating counter-influence activities. Latin American governments and civil society organizations that view Iranian and Hezbollah networks as destabilizing. U.S. allies in the region who may benefit from increased diplomatic coordination. Members of Congress who gain formal oversight visibility into executive branch foreign policy activities in the region. Journalists and researchers who would receive an unclassified public document on U.S. strategy.
Who is hurt
Iranian diplomatic and cultural personnel operating in Latin America who could face visa denials or sanctions. Organizations affiliated with Al Mustafa International University, which could face terrorist designations. Spanish-language media outlets HispanTV and Al Mayadeen Español, which could face sanctions or broadcasting restrictions. Latin American academic institutions and NGOs that partner with Iranian-affiliated entities, who could face scrutiny or secondary sanctions pressure. Individuals in Latin America who consume or work for these media platforms.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Iran and Hezbollah have significantly expanded their presence in Latin America over the past two decades, including through cultural centers, Spanish-language media, and university networks used for ideological outreach and recruitment — a pattern documented by the U.S. Treasury Department, DEA, and multiple think tanks. They contend that requiring a formal, unclassified strategy compels the executive branch to coordinate and articulate a coherent response, filling a documented gap in U.S. counter-influence policy in the Western Hemisphere. Precedent exists: the U.S. previously sanctioned Iran's Al-Manar and Press TV networks, demonstrating that such tools are legally available and operationally feasible.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's prescriptive requirements — including potential terrorist designations for university networks and restrictions on media platforms — could restrict nonviolent religious, educational, and journalistic activity in ways that raise First Amendment and due process concerns when applied to U.S. persons or entities. They contend that mandating a public strategy with specific operational elements (intelligence methods, sanctions targets, diplomatic pressure) could telegraph U.S. intentions to adversaries and constrain the executive branch's flexibility in sensitive diplomatic negotiations. Critics may also argue that the bill's framing conflates cultural and religious outreach with terrorism-support without sufficient evidentiary standards, potentially sweeping in protected activity alongside genuine security threats.