Title 22 › Chapter 111— AUSTRALIA, UNITED KINGDOM, AND UNITED STATES (AUKUS) SECURITY PARTNERSHIP › Subchapter I— ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS › § 10413
The President must send the full text of any non-binding AUKUS paper to the appropriate congressional committees within 30 days after it is signed, finished, or otherwise finalized. The “text” includes annexes, side letters, implementing agreements, or similar documents that are made around the same time and in connection with the main paper. “Around the same time” is read broadly and does not mean everything had to happen the same day. If the text is sent under this rule, it does not have to be sent again under section 112b(a)(1)(A)(ii) of title 1, as amended by section 5947 of the James M. Inhofe National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2023 (Public Law 117–263; 136 Stat. 3476), but other legal reporting duties under section 112b or any other law still apply. Not later than one year after December 22, 2023, and every two years after that, the Secretary of State, working with the Secretary of Defense and other agencies, must give Congress a report on AUKUS. Each report must identify the defensive gaps AUKUS is meant to fill, explain the total U.S. cost for Pillar One, describe how access to Australia’s industrial base and naval bases helps U.S. strategy in Asia, and assess how Australia’s conventionally armed, nuclear-powered attack submarines support U.S. defense and deterrence in the Indo‑Pacific. The report must also describe progress on Australia’s “Optimal Pathway” for getting such submarines, including work with the IAEA on an Article 14 arrangement, building basing infrastructure, training a workforce, creating support facilities in western Australia by 2027, and improving U.S. submarine production so the United States can provide up to five Virginia‑class submarines to Australia by the early to mid‑2030s while meeting U.S. needs. Finally, the report must assess progress on Pillar Two collaboration across eight trilateral areas—underseas, quantum, AI and autonomy, advanced cyber, hypersonics and counter‑hypersonics, electronic warfare, innovation, and information sharing—and note any new lines of effort.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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22 U.S.C. § 10413
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60