The U.S.
Government controls exports of sensitive equipment, software and technology as a
means to promote our national security interests and foreign policy objectives.
Through our export control system, the U.S. government can effectively:
·
Provide for
national security by limiting access to the most sensitive U.S. technology and
weapons
·
Promote
regional stability
·
Take into account
human rights considerations
·
Prevent
proliferation of weapons and technologies, including of weapons of mass
destruction, to problem end-users and supporters of international terrorism
·
Comply with
international commitments, i.e. nonproliferation regimes and UN Security
Council sanctions and UNSC resolution 1540
Building A Single
Licensing Agency
Under the current
export control system, three different USG agencies have the authority to issue
export licenses: the Departments of State, Commerce, and the Treasury. In 2009,
licensing agencies within these departments processed over 130,000
applications. In 2010 alone, the Department of Commerce processed approximately
22,000 applications. In some cases, exporters were required to apply for
multiple licenses from separate departments.
The goal of the
ECR Initiative is to create a Single Licensing Agency (SLA), which would act as
a “one stop shop” for businesses seeking an export license and for the USG to
coordinate review of license applications. The result will be a licensing
process that is transparent, predictable, and timely.
Essential Elements
of an Effective Export Control System
To effectively
implement an export control system, a country must exhibit a broad national
commitment to the endeavor. This commitment is first illustrated by making the
political decision to adhere to international nonproliferation norms, as
defined by various multilateral regimes, and engage solely in responsible arms
transfers.
Second, a nation
must establish a legal authority to control the export of defense-related and
dual-use goods and technologies. This authority would adhere to six legal
principles:
·
Comprehensive
Controls
·
Implementing
Directives
·
Enforcement
Power and Penalties
·
Interagency
Coordination
·
International
Cooperation
·
Protection against
governmental dissemination of sensitive business information.
Third, a country
should implement regulatory procedures to support export control laws and
policies. These procedures should establish clear lines of authority and
provide for a list of controlled items. The control list should adhere to
international norms (multilateral regime lists and their associated catch-all
controls). The regulations should be clear and easily accessible to exporters
in their description of licensing and enforcement policy. The designated
authority administering the regulatory regime should review license requests
for completeness and clarity. The regulations should encourage transparency and
predictability of governmental decision making, and should give sufficient room
for exceptions to policy in the interest of the government.
Fourth, proper
enforcement measures should be built into the system. Preventive enforcement is
essential, and should include established procedures related to export license
applications (i.e. screening the proposed item, quantity, end-use and all
parties involved in the transaction for any potential export) and compliance
mechanisms (i.e. working in partnership with industry to educate them on how
and why -- to monitor and control their own export activity). The ability and
authority to interdict and investigate illicit exports are necessary to
implement an effective export control system. International cooperation can
ensure full compliance with export legislation.
Nonproliferation
Regimes and Arrangements
The U.S. is a
member of various multilateral nonproliferation regimes, including:
·
Nuclear Suppliers
Group (NSG) - With 39 member states, the NSG is a widely accepted, mature, and
effective export-control arrangement which contributes to the nonproliferation
of nuclear weapons through implementation of guidelines for control of nuclear
and nuclear-related exports.
·
Zangger Committee
- The purpose of the 35-nation Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT) Exporters
(Zangger) Committee is to harmonize implementation of the NPT requirements to
apply International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards to nuclear exports.
The Committee maintains and updates a list of equipment and materials that may
only be exported if safeguards are applied to the recipient facility (called
the "Trigger List" because such exports trigger the requirement for
safeguards).
·
Missile Technology
Control Regime (MTCR) - The 34 MTCR partners have committed to apply a common
export policy (MTCR Guidelines) to a common list of controlled items, including
all key equipment and technology needed for missile development, production,
and operation. MTCR Guidelines restrict transfers of missiles - and technology
related to missiles - for the delivery of WMD. The regime places particular
focus on missiles capable of delivering a payload of at least 500 kg with a
range of at least 300 km -- so-called "Category I" or
"MTCR-class" missiles.
·
Australia Group
(AG) - Objective is to ensure that the industries of the thirty-eight
participating countries do not assist, either purposefully or inadvertently, states
or terrorists seeking to acquire a chemical and/or biological weapons (CBW)
capability.
·
Wassenaar
Arrangement (WA) - The regime with the most extensive set of control lists; it
seeks to prevent destabilizing accumulations of arms and dual-use equipment and
technologies that may contribute to the development or enhancement of military
capabilities that would undermine regional security and stability, and to
develop mechanisms for information sharing among the 34 partners as a way to
harmonize export control practices and policies.
U.S. Export
Control Legislation and Authorities
The Arms Export
Control Act (AECA) is the cornerstone of U.S. munitions export control law. The
Department of State implements this statute by the International Traffic in Arms
Regulations (ITAR). All persons or entities that engage in the manufacture,
export, or brokering of defense articles and services must be registered with
the U.S. government. The ITAR sets out the requirements for licenses or other
authorizations for specific exports of defense articles and services. The AECA
requires the State Department to provide an annual and quarterly report of
export authorizations to Congress. Certain proposed export approvals and
reports of unauthorized re-transfers also require congressional
notification.
The Export
Administration Act of 1979, as amended, authorizes the Department of Commerce,
in consultation with other appropriate agencies, to regulate the export or
re-export of U.S.-origin dual-use goods, software, and technology. The
Department of Commerce implements this authority through the Export
Administration Regulations (EAR). In addition to export controls agreed in the
multilateral regimes, the Department of Commerce also imposes certain export
and re-export controls for foreign policy reasons, most notably against
countries designated by the U.S. Secretary of State as state sponsors of
international terrorism, as well as certain countries, entities and individuals
subject to domestic unilateral or UN sanctions. Additionally, the Department of
Commerce administers and enforces regulations that prohibit certain trade and
transactions with certain countries, entities, and individuals by U.S. persons
or from the United States under the Trading with the Enemy Act and the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act.
Various other U.S.
agencies have licensing authority for different exports, for example:
·
Nuclear - Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Departments of Energy and Commerce
·
Trade embargoes
& sanctions/Transactions - Department of the Treasury
U.S. Control Lists
and Licensing Procedures
U.S. control lists
correspond directly with the lists maintained by the various multinational
export control regimes, but are augmented by unilateral controls when necessary
to ensure national security and foreign policy imperatives. The three major
lists of export-controlled items are the Commerce Control List (CCL), the
United States Munitions List (USML), and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Controls (NRCC).
The CCL includes
the following:
·
Items on Wassenaar
Arrangement Dual-Use List
·
Nuclear-related dual
use commodities (compiled in the Nuclear Suppliers Group's Nuclear Referral
List)
·
Dual-use items on
Missile Technology Control Regime List
·
CW Precursors,
biological organisms and toxins, and CBW-related equipment on the Australia
Group lists
·
Items controlled
in furtherance of U.S. foreign policy and other objectives, including
anti-terrorism, crime control, Firearms Convention, regional stability, UN
sanctions, and short supply reasons
·
Unlisted items
when destined for specified end-uses or end-users (catch-all controls)
The U.S. Munitions
List regulates defense articles and services. An article or service may be
designated as a defense article or service if it:
1. Is specifically
designed, developed, configured, adapted or modified for a military application
and
1. Does not have
predominant civil applications, and
2. Does not have
performance equivalent (defined by form, fit, and function) to those of an
article or service used for civil applications, or
2. Is specifically
designed, developed, configured, adapted or modified for a military
application, and has significant military or intelligence applicability such
that control is necessary.
NOTE: The intended
use of the article or service after its export is not relevant in determining
whether the article or service is controlled on the U.S. Munitions List.
The NRCC regulates:
·
Exports of nuclear
equipment and materials, such as those in Part I of the NSG Guidelines.
Also, the
Department of Energy regulates the provision of assistance for foreign atomic
energy activities:
·
Under its legal
authorities, DOE can authorize U.S. persons under certain circumstances to
engage in the production of special nuclear material outside the United States.
Some transfers may take place pursuant to general authorizations in DOE
regulations. Other transfers - including transfers of unclassified nuclear
technology related to trigger list items listed in Part I of the Nuclear
Suppliers Group Guidelines - require specific authorizations.
Exporters
generally must submit a license request with the appropriate agency for any
item on one of these lists. License requests typically go through an extensive
review process, including review by interested U.S. government agencies, such
as the Department of Defense, Department of Energy, the intelligence community,
and NASA, as well as interested bureaus within the Department of State. During this process, the U.S.government
reviews:
·
the
eligibility of the applicant
·
all parties
involved in the transaction
·
appropriateness of
the quality and quantity of the proposed export to the end-user and stated
end-use
·
any legal
impediments to the proposed export
·
any national
security implications presented by the proposed export
·
any foreign policy
implications, including but not limited to:
o potential effect on regional stability
o human rights
o
ensuring
compliance with multilateral control regimes.
In 2004, the
Office of Defense Trade Controls in the Department of State's Bureau of
Political-Military Affairs reviewed approximately 55,000 requests for export
licenses. The U.S. Department of Commerce receives some 12,000 to 14,000
dual-use export applications per year. Both the munitions and dual-use export
control systems of the United States allow for license exemptions (or
exceptions) when the government has determined that the particular item, value,
end-use and end-user do not constitute sufficient risk to require an export
license.
In addition to
control lists, the U.S. export control system also relies on catch-all controls
to ensure that problematic dual-use exports -- which are not otherwise subject
to export controls -- are capable of being tracked, discussed with the
recipient government, or even denied as an export transaction. Catch-all
regulations incident to the dual-use list prohibit the export without a
license of any equipment, software, or technology that would contribute to
projects of proliferation concern. The Export Administration Regulations
provide specific identification of particular foreign entities that the U.S.
Government designates as end-users of concern. An individual license to export
an otherwise non-controlled item is required if an exporter:
·
Knows or has
reason to believe that an export will be used in a weapons of mass destruction
(WMD) program or missile project of concern, or
·
Is informed by the
Department of Commerce that an export would present an unacceptable risk of use
in or diversion to a WMD program or missile project of concern.
Each license
application under catch-all controls is reviewed on a case-by-case basis. If
the U.S. Government determines that the export poses an unacceptable risk of
use in or diversion to a nuclear proliferation activity, or that the export
would make a material contribution to a chemical or biological proliferation
activity, or a missile project of concern, the license is denied. These
controls are consistent with AG, MTCR, and NSG catch-all requirements.
Exporters: Be
familiar with your customers
Applying common
sense is essential in weeding out potentially problematic transfers. Alarms should sound if:
A customer or agent -
·
Is reluctant to
provide end-use/user information
·
Is willing to pay
cash for high-value shipments
·
Has little
background or history in the relevant business
·
Appears unfamiliar
with the product or its use
·
Declines
normal warranty/service/installation
·
Orders
products/quantities incompatible with the relevant business
·
Provides vague
delivery dates or locations
A shipment involves -
·
Private
intermediary in major weapons sale
·
Freight forwarder
designated as consignee/end-user
·
Intermediate
consignee's business or location incompatible with end-user's
·
Shipments directed
to trading companies, freight forwarders, or companies with no connection to
buyer
·
Requests for
packing inconsistent with normal mode of shipping
·
Choice of
circuitous or economically illogical routing, or through multiple
countries;
The end-user requests -
·
Equipment
inconsistent with inventory
·
Spare parts in
excess of projected needs
·
Performance/design
specs incompatible with resources or environment
·
Technical
capability/end-use incompatible with consignee's line of business
·
End-use at
variance with standard practices
·
Middleman from
third country to place order
·
Refuses to state
whether goods are for domestic use, export, or re-export
U.S. Mechanisms of
Enforcement
The U.S.
government has built in various enforcement mechanisms to ensure compliance
with our export control laws. U.S. Customs officials (now part of the
Department of Homeland Security) have the authority to check any export or
import against its license at the borders. For dual-use items, Department of
Commerce officials also investigate violations. Licensing authorities often require
pre-license checks and post-shipment verifications.
Criminal and civil
penalties for export control violations can be severe. For munitions export
control violations, the statute authorizes a maximum criminal penalty of $1
million per violation and, for an individual person, up to 10 years
imprisonment. In addition, munitions violations can result in the imposition of
a maximum civil fine of $500,000 per violation of the ITAR, as well as
debarment from exporting defense articles or services. For dual-use export
control violations, criminal penalties can reach a maximum of $500,000 per
violation and, for an individual person, up to 10 years imprisonment. Dual-use
violations can also be subject to civil fines up to $12,000 per violation, as
well as denial of export privileges. It should be noted that in many enforcement
cases, both criminal and civil penalties are imposed.
Controls on
Brokering Activity
The Arms Export
Control Act (AECA) was amended in 1996 to cover brokering activity by all
persons (except officers/employees of the USG acting in an official capacity)
with respect to the manufacture, export, import, or transfer of any defense
articles or defense service on the U.S. Munitions List of the ITAR. It is
noteworthy that this coverage is not limited to U.S. origin defense
articles/services, but can also extend to brokering involving foreign defense
articles and services. Under the ITAR, persons engaged in the business of
brokering activities are required to register with the Department of State and
obtain the applicable authorizations for each brokering transaction. Brokering
activities involving non-munitions items, where known by the perpetrator to be
destined for WMD or missile activities, would be subject to U.S. catch-all
controls.
As defined in the
ITAR, a broker is anyone who acts as an agent for others in negotiating or
arranging contracts, purchases, sales or transfers of defense articles or
defense services in return for a fee, commission or other consideration.
"Brokering activities" include the financing, transportation, freight
forwarding or taking of any other action that facilitates the manufacture,
export, import, or transfer of a defense article or service irrespective of its
origin. This includes activities -- by U.S. persons who are located inside or
outside of the U.S., or foreign persons subject to U.S. jurisdiction --
involving defense articles or defense services of U.S. or foreign origin that
are located inside or outside of the U.S. This does not include, however,
activities by U.S. persons that are limited exclusively to U.S. domestic sales
or transfers, and persons exclusively in the business of financing,
transporting, or freight forwarding, whose business activities do not also
include brokering defense articles or defense services.
Any person
registering as a broker must also provide an annual report to the U.S.
government enumerating and describing its brokering activities and any
exemptions used for other covered activities. Violations would be punishable
under the same penalties noted above for munitions export violations.
Sanctions
The United States
works closely with its friends and allies to halt the transfer of arms-related
and proliferation-related items to countries or end-users of concern as well as
regions of conflict. When we receive information on potential transfers of
concern, we seek to persuade the countries involved to prevent such transfers.
U.S. laws and regulations also provide for imposition of mandatory and/or
discretionary sanctions on governments, entities, or persons involved in
transferring certain military equipment or other items of proliferation of
concern.
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