This bill requires the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of State to monitor China's efforts to build or buy strategic foreign ports. It also mandates a study and report on the implications of China's control over these ports for U.S. national security and economic interests.
Strategic Ports Reporting Act This bill requires the Department of State to conduct a study and submit a report to Congress on strategic ports. The report shall contain various elements related to such ports, including (1) a detailed list of all strategic ports owned, operated, or controlled by China or a foreign person of China; (2) a detailed list of all strategic ports owned, operated, or controlled by the United States or a U.S. person; (3) an assessment of the national security and economic interests relevant to each such port; (4) an analysis of actions by China to gain control or ownership of strategic ports; and (5) courses of action to protect strategic ports and maritime infrastructure from Chinese control. The bill also requires the State Department to develop and provide to Congress a global mapping of foreign and domestic ports of importance to the United States because of a capability to provide military, diplomatic, economic, or resource exploitation superiority.
1. The Secretary of State and Secretary of Defense must create an updated global map of important ports for the U.S. and identify any Chinese efforts to control them. 2. A report detailing the findings of a study on strategic ports must be submitted to Congress within one year of the bill's enactment. 3. The report will include assessments of vulnerabilities at U.S. ports and a suggested strategy for maintaining secure investments in strategic ports.