Federal News
Senators Introduce Baltic Security Assessment Act
March 19, 2026
Senators Dick Durbin and Chuck Grassley introduced the Baltic Security Assessment Act of 2026 to mandate a comprehensive evaluation of emerging security threats and opportunities to strengthen U.S. diplomatic and defense cooperation with the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. This legislation directs coordination between Congress and the Administration to assess risks posed by Russia, Belarus, China, and Iran, reinforcing U.S. commitments to NATO and regional stability. The act aims to inform future defense and security procurement strategies that support enhanced deterrence and multilateral partnerships in the Baltic region.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals should anticipate increased demand for defense and security-related contracts focused on the Baltic region, including intelligence, surveillance, and regional security cooperation initiatives.
- The legislation signals potential funding and programmatic emphasis on strengthening NATO partnerships and countering regional threats, impacting defense contractors and service providers.
- Agencies such as the Department of Defense and State Department will likely expand requirements for security assessments, technology deployments, and cooperative defense projects involving Baltic partners.
- Businesses engaged in defense, diplomatic support services, and regional security technologies should evaluate opportunities arising from this legislative focus on Baltic security enhancement.
The United States, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania are all united by the principles of democracy and the free market. For decades, these Baltic nations have contributed to the regions security and stability, and its critical for America to stand with them against Putins ongoing aggression. This bipartisan legislation will strengthen our ties with the Baltics by ensuring the United States carefully assesses the evolving threats they face and identifies ways to bolster deterrence against Russias continued attempts to encroach on NATO territory.
— Chuck Grassley, U.S. Senator
Not only do I have strong personal ties to the region, but the Baltic countries are essential NATO partners in upholding democratic values and transatlantic security. Our bill encourages coordination between Congress and the Administration on the threats posed to the Baltic countries by bad actors such as Russia, Belarus, China, and Iran.
— Dick Durbin, U.S. Senate Democratic Whip
Agencies
United States Senate, United States Department of State, United States Department of Defense, House Committees on Armed Services, Foreign Relations and Affairs, and Appropriations, Senate Committees on Armed Services, Foreign Relations and Affairs, and Appropriations