Federal News
Congress Strengthens Iran Sanctions Enforcement
March 19, 2026
Congress has passed the Enhanced Iran Sanctions Act of 2025 in the House of Representatives, with bipartisan support led by Congressman Mike Lawler and Representative Emilia Sykes. The legislation aims to intensify enforcement against foreign entities involved in Iran's illicit oil trade, targeting networks that facilitate sanctions evasion. The bill is currently under Senate consideration, signaling potential forthcoming regulatory and enforcement actions that could impact international trade compliance and contracting with entities linked to Iran.
- Procurement professionals should anticipate increased scrutiny and compliance requirements related to sanctions enforcement, especially for contracts involving foreign suppliers or partners potentially connected to Iran.
- Contractors engaged in oil, energy, or international trade sectors may face heightened due diligence obligations to avoid involvement with sanctioned entities.
- Agencies and vendors should prepare for possible updates to contracting regulations and enforcement mechanisms aligned with the new sanctions framework.
- This development underscores the importance of monitoring legislative progress and aligning procurement strategies with evolving U.S. sanctions policies to mitigate risk.
Iran should not be able to profit from illicit oil sales while continuing to destabilize the region. Iβm glad to see this bipartisan bill advance, ensuring sanctions are fully enforced and holding accountable those who help the regime evade them.
— Rep. Emilia Sykes
Agencies
U.S. House of Representatives, U.S. State Department