A bill to require the Chief of Space Operations to submit a feasibility report on expanding the Multinational Force Operation Olympic Defender.
Legislative Progress
Plain English Summary
AI-generatedPlain-English Summary
This bill would require the Chief of Space Operations — the top military official overseeing the U.S. Space Force — to prepare and submit a report examining whether it is practical and beneficial to expand an existing international military partnership focused on space. The partnership in question, called Operation Olympic Defender, is a multinational effort led by the United States that coordinates space-related activities among allied nations, including things like tracking satellites, sharing information about potential threats in space, and protecting space systems that militaries rely on.
The report would essentially be a study, not a direct policy change. It would ask military leadership to look into whether more countries could or should join this partnership, and what challenges or benefits that expansion might bring. The bill does not commit the U.S. to any specific action — it simply calls for an analysis of the possibilities.
This bill would primarily affect U.S. military and national security agencies, particularly the Space Force, as well as potentially allied foreign governments who might be considered for inclusion in the expanded partnership. Everyday Americans could be indirectly affected, since space systems support things like GPS, communications, and national defense that many people depend on daily.
The bill has been introduced in the Senate and referred to the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, where it will be reviewed before any further action is taken. No official cost estimates or detailed policy positions have been attached to it at this stage.
This summary is AI-generated for informational purposes. Always refer to the official bill text for legal accuracy.
Latest Action
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
March 25, 2026
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Committees
Legislative History
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Mar 25, 2026Introduced in Senate
Mar 25, 2026