The U.S.-European Union Trade and Technology Council could soon begin prioritizing China issues over Russia, which has dominated much of the group’s time since it was established in 2021, said Frances Burwell, a distinguished fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Europe Center. She also said the TTC should focus more of its energy on investment screening, particularly as both sides consider a new tool to screen certain outbound investments (see 2305110033).
Ian Cohen
Ian Cohen, Deputy Managing Editor, is a reporter with Export Compliance Daily and its sister publications International Trade Today and Trade Law Daily, where he covers export controls, sanctions and international trade issues. He previously worked as a local government reporter in South Florida. Ian graduated with a journalism degree from the University of Florida in 2017 and lives in Washington, D.C. He joined the staff of Warren Communications News in 2019.
The House Foreign Affairs Committee could soon consider legislation that would harmonize various U.S. sanctions lists in a bid to help agencies better reach consensus when reviewing export license applications. Rep. Michael Waltz, R-Fla., said the Commerce Department has an outsized vote in adjudicating applications of sensitive exports and should be required to more carefully weigh input from other agencies, including the Defense and State departments.
The Biden administration’s upcoming executive order on outbound investment is “likely to be coming in the next few weeks,” said Jeannette Chu, vice president for national security policy at the National Foreign Trade Council. Chu, speaking during a May 11 Materials and Equipment Technical Advisory Committee meeting, said she expects the new screening tool to be unveiled around or soon after the G-7 meetings in Japan next week.
The Bureau of Industry and Security needs much more funding to carry out its export control work, lawmakers and former officials said during a House hearing this week. Kevin Wolf, a former senior official at BIS, said Congress should consider doubling -- perhaps quadrupling -- the agency’s resources.
A former Pentagon official expected to testify before Congress May 11 said U.S. officials for years have “refused” to fix failures in its export control system that allow China to acquire sensitive technologies. Stephen Coonen, who spent nearly 14 years in the Defense Technology Security Administration, including as its senior foreign affairs adviser for China, said he resigned from the agency in 2021 to protest the Bureau of Industry and Security’s “willful blindness” surrounding its export policies.
Members of the European Parliament are pushing for tighter enforcement of export controls surrounding spyware products, saying several countries -- including Cyprus, Greece and Bulgaria -- are routinely flouting the bloc’s export restrictions. They also criticized the European Commission for not doing enough to hold member states accountable for potentially violating the EU’s dual-use export controls (see 2105100013).
The Commerce Department again renewed a temporary export denial order for Mahan Airways because the airline continues to violate the order and the Export Administration Regulations. Mahan Airways has been on the banned list since 2008, and Commerce in its May 5 notice said the Iranian airline has continued to fly to and from Iran from Russia and China in violation of U.S. export controls. It also said the airline in April reportedly began direct flights from Iran to Minsk, Belarus, and also has helped repair planes belonging to Russia's Aeroflot, which is also subject to a temporary denial order (see 2303300013). The latest renewal for Mahan is for 180 days from May 5.
Although the U.S. continues to impose new sanctions and export controls against Russia, the Commerce Department’s $300 million penalty assigned to Seagate Technologies last month signals that the U.S. is increasingly prioritizing enforcement, particularly against China, law firms said this month. They also said the fine shows that Commerce is looking to strictly enforce its foreign direct product rule restrictions, even for violations of the rule that may not be obvious.
The State Department’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls released guidance to help exporters comply with a proposal that could introduce new filing requirements for certain U.S. Munitions List items. The guidance -- which deals with a proposed rule by the Census Bureau that could require exporters to submit a new data element in the Automated Export System when shipping USML Category XXI items (see 2305020007) -- features a range of frequently asked questions, including about how exporters can determine whether their items are controlled under Category XXI, when exporters should use the data element and more.
A bill introduced in the Senate last week could create new export authorizations -- including a new open general license for certain defense exports and a new license exception for dual-use goods -- to expedite shipments to Australia, Canada and the U.K. The legislation, introduced by Sens. Jim Risch, R-Idaho, and Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., also would allow the State Department to hire more export license review officers, create a “fast-track” foreign military sales process, reduce barriers to information sharing within the Australia-U.K.-U.S. partnership and more.