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Contact Congress about S. 3390: Tracking and Restricting Adversarial Circumvention of Embargoes Act of 2025

U.S. intelligence officials would study whether China is helping Iran sell oil or get missile-related materials despite sanctions. Treasury would then decide whether China is doing anything punishable under current sanctions law.

Modern Action explains legislation in plain English, helps you choose whether to support, oppose, or ask for changes, and drafts a message tied to the bill, your stance, and the elected officials who can act on it.

Tracking and Restricting Adversarial Circumvention of Embargoes Act of 2025 is a Senate bill in committee. The latest recorded action: Read twice and referred to the Select Committee on Intelligence.

Latest action on S. 3390: Read twice and referred to the Select Committee on Intelligence.

Who this affects: This bill mainly affects U.S. intelligence agencies, the Treasury Department, Congress, and Chinese entities tied to Iranian oil or missile-related trade. Intelligence officials would have to gather and explain the facts. Treasury would have to decide whether current sanctions law applies. Congress would receive the findings and could use them to press for enforcement or new legislation.

Why this matters: This bill matters because Iran may be using outside buyers and hidden business networks to get around sanctions. If China is part of that system, Congress and Treasury would get a clearer record of what is happening. The results could affect U.S. national security planning, sanctions enforcement, and relations with China. The bill itself does not say what happens next if Treasury finds sanctionable activity.

Key provisions in S. 3390

  • The Director of National Intelligence must send a report within 180 days after the bill becomes law. The report must study oil deals and missile-related transactions between China and Iran.
  • The report must look at China’s purchases of Iranian oil since 2020. It must also examine whether shipping stopovers or shell companies helped hide those purchases or avoid sanctions.
  • The report must review major money transfers by Chinese entities. Those transfers must relate to chemicals or other materials that may help Iran’s ballistic missile program.
  • The intelligence report must go to named House and Senate committees. These include committees that handle banking, commerce, intelligence, spending, armed services, and foreign affairs.
  • The Treasury Secretary must decide whether China is doing anything punishable under current sanctions law. Treasury gets 180 days after receiving the intelligence report to make that decision.

How Modern Action helps you take action on S. 3390

You do not have to start with a blank letter. Modern Action turns the bill, your position, and the relevant congressional context into a message you can edit and send. The goal is to make contacting Congress clear, specific, and useful without forcing you to parse bill text or figure out the right office on your own.

Questions people ask about S. 3390

What is S. 3390?
U.S. intelligence officials would study whether China is helping Iran sell oil or get missile-related materials despite sanctions. Treasury would then decide whether China is doing anything punishable under current sanctions law.
How do I support or oppose S. 3390?
Choose support, oppose, or ask for changes on Modern Action. The action flow drafts the message for you and keeps the wording tied to this bill.
Who should I contact about S. 3390?
Modern Action uses your location to route the action to the congressional offices relevant to the bill and your representation.
Can Modern Action explain S. 3390 before I act?
Yes. Modern Action gives you a plain-English summary, current status, and action context before you send anything.