CFIUS is tasked with reviewing foreign acquisitions of US companies and consists of representatives from 16 agencies, including treasury, homeland security and defense.
Grassley's comments are part of a growing trend among some US lawmakers to have CFIUS play an expanded role in reviewing potential transactions, particularly those coming from China.
The organization has never rejected a deal on the grounds of food security. Nevertheless, it will be subjected to an obligatory 75-day review because ChemChina is State-owned.
Although based in Switzerland, Syngenta is the biggest seller of pesticides in North America, from where it gets nearly a quarter of its revenue, and a major seller of seeds.
Its US headquarters is in North Carolina, and it has other facilities in several states, including California, Delaware, Iowa, Louisiana, Nebraska and Minnesota.
Michael Wessel, a member of the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission, which was created to monitor China for Congress, has insisted there are food safety risks for the US to consider in the ChemChina-Syngenta deal, and agrees with Grassley in wanting the Agriculture Department to be involved in CFIUS's review
"The potential risks to US food safety from the Syngenta transaction send a strong signal that the USDA (US Department of Agriculture) needs to be integrated into CFIUS' review of this transaction.
"Syngenta's leading role in the seed-technology sector requires a thorough review. Food security is a national security issue," said Wessel in an e-mail.
However, David Miller, director of research and commodity services for the Iowa Farm Bureau Federation, does not believe a change in ownership should raise food-safety issues.
Emma Gonzalez contributed to this story.