EO-14353
Assuring the Security of the State of Qatar
- Signed
- Sep 29, 2025
- Published
- Oct 6, 2025
Federal Register: 2025-19483
Source: Federal Register.
U.S. Security Guarantee for the State of Qatar
What it does
This order declares it U.S. policy to guarantee the security and territorial integrity of Qatar against external attack. It directs the Secretary of Defense to maintain joint military contingency planning with Qatar and directs the Secretary of State to formally reaffirm this security commitment and continue partnering with Qatar on diplomatic mediation efforts. The order treats any armed attack on Qatar — including its critical infrastructure — as a threat to U.S. peace and security.
Who benefits
The Qatari government and its population. U.S. military personnel and contractors stationed at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, who gain a clearer security framework. U.S. diplomatic and intelligence agencies that rely on Qatar as a regional partner and mediator. American companies with business interests in Qatar. Parties to regional conflicts (e.g., in Gaza or Afghanistan) where Qatar has historically served as a mediator, who may benefit from a more stable Qatari role.
Who is affected
Members of Congress who argue that security commitments of this magnitude require Senate treaty ratification or legislative authorization. U.S. taxpayers who could bear costs of any future military action taken under this commitment. Regional states that may view the guarantee as a shift in U.S. alignment — particularly those in tension with Qatar, such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Bahrain. U.S. military personnel who could be deployed under contingency plans activated by this order.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Qatar hosts Al Udeid Air Base — one of the largest U.S. military installations in the Middle East — making its security directly tied to U.S. operational capacity in the region. They contend the Commander-in-Chief Clause and the president's broad foreign-affairs authority give the executive full power to issue such security assurances to allied nations, consistent with decades of similar informal commitments to partners worldwide.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a formal guarantee to treat an attack on Qatar as a threat to U.S. security — and to respond with potential military force — is functionally equivalent to a mutual defense treaty, which the Constitution requires the Senate to ratify by a two-thirds vote. They contend that committing the U.S. to possible military action through a unilateral executive order bypasses Congress's war powers and could obligate the country to armed conflict without legislative authorization.
Constitutional basis
Executive orders rest on constitutional authority or statutory delegation. This summary describes the legal grounding cited or implied by the order.
The order cites the president's general constitutional and statutory authority without naming a specific statute. The most applicable bases are the Commander-in-Chief Clause (Article II, §2, cl. 1), which grants the president authority over military forces and operations, and the Reception Clause (Article II, §3), which underpins the president's exclusive power to conduct foreign relations and recognize foreign governments. However, the order's commitment to potential military defense of a foreign nation raises tension with the Declare War Clause (Article I, §8, cl. 11), which reserves the power to declare war to Congress, and the Treaty Clause (Article II, §2, cl. 2), which requires Senate ratification of formal defense agreements.