DISRUPT Act
Sponsored By: Representative Krishnamoorthi
Introduced
Summary
Disrupt cooperation among four U.S. adversaries. The DISRUPT Act would compel the executive branch to build a whole-of-government strategy to disrupt growing cooperation among the People’s Republic of China, the Russian Federation, the Islamic Republic of Iran, and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. It would use sanctions, export controls, transparency, and allied information sharing while creating interagency structures and timelines to coordinate deterrence, economic defenses, and munitions planning across priority theaters.
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- Creates task forces at State, Defense, Treasury, and Commerce led by designated "heads of adversary alignment" with experts and security clearances, and requires a Director of National Intelligence report within 60 days and agency strategy reports within 180 days.
- Directs sharing of intelligence and analyses with allies to expose and constrain adversary alignment and sets diplomatic and security focus on the Indo-Pacific, Europe, and the Middle East.
- Requires plans to protect economic statecraft, use sanctions and export controls, and to stockpile and co-produce munitions with partners while strengthening allied domestic defense production using existing programs like Foreign Military Financing.
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Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
1 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
New federal task forces and strategy on adversaries
If enacted, the Secretaries of State, Defense, Treasury, and Commerce would each set up a task force within 60 days. Each task force would include experts on China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea and staff with security clearances. Task force heads would meet at least quarterly and each task force would send a report within 180 days. The Director of National Intelligence would give a classified report within 60 days on how those four countries cooperate and risks for the next five years. Within 180 days, the Secretaries of State and Defense would deliver a classified two-year strategy to disrupt that cooperation, boost deterrence, increase partner munitions and co-production, use Foreign Military Financing, and require Defense war-planning tools be digitized within one year after the report.
Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Krishnamoorthi
IL • D
Cosponsors
Del. Moylan, James C. [R-GU-At Large]
GU • R
Sponsored 11/4/2025
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
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