Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART VI— - ELEMENTS OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AND OTHER MATTERS › Subpart Subpart B— - Atomic Energy Defense › Chapter CHAPTER 608— - ADMINISTRATIVE MATTERS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - CONTRACTS › § 6327
The Secretary of Energy may block or exclude suppliers, or temporarily ban a supplier for up to two years, for covered defense-related buys and may keep secret the reasons for doing so when needed to reduce supply chain risk. The Secretary may only use this power after getting a risk assessment showing a significant supply chain risk; making a written finding that the action is needed to protect national security and that less-restrictive steps are not reasonably available; and, if secrecy is planned, finding that the national security risk from disclosure outweighs the risk of hiding the information. Within seven days of that written finding, the Secretary must send notice to the appropriate congressional committees that includes the information required by section 3304(e)(2)(A) of title 41, a summary of the risk assessment, and a summary of why less-restrictive measures were not suitable. The Secretary must only tell people what is needed to carry out the action, must tell other federal buying agencies when appropriate, and must keep those notices confidential. Courts may not review these actions. The Secretary may delegate this authority to the Administrator for the Administration or to the Department’s Senior Procurement Executive. Defined terms (one line each): appropriate congressional committees = the congressional defense committees and the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources plus the House Committees on Energy and Commerce; covered item of supply = an item bought for a covered system whose loss of integrity could cause supply chain risk; covered procurement = buying or contracting actions that include supply chain risk requirements; covered procurement action = excluding a source, withholding subcontract consent, or similar steps to reduce supply chain risk; covered system = national security systems, nuclear weapons and related items, and related development or surveillance items; special exclusion action = a ban up to two years on awards for a source that poses supply chain risk; supply chain risk = the chance an adversary could sabotage, tamper with, or otherwise subvert a system or its parts to spy on, stop, or damage it. Authority ends on December 31, 2028.
Full Legal Text
Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 6327
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73