The State Department is seeking public comments on the paperwork burden relating to a notice of proposed information collection on certain technology security/clearance plans, screening records and non-disclosure agreements required by the International Traffic in Arms Regulations. Comments are due Oct. 30.
The State Department appears to have inadvertently removed an incentive for companies to voluntarily disclose export control violations, according to a Sept. 25 post by Winston & Strawn, pointing to a recent settlement between the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls and L3 Harris Technologies.
The Directorate of Defense Control’s Defense Export Control and Compliance System will be unavailable Sept. 28 from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. EDT for system updates and maintenance, the DDTC said Sept. 25. Users will not be able to submit Advisory Opinion or Commodity Jurisdiction requests during the outage. DDTC said the time window for the maintenance may change. Questions or concerns should be directed to the DDTC Help Desk at (202) 663-2838 or dtradehelpdesk@state.gov.
U.S. exporters reported sales of 581,000 metric tons of soybeans to China since Sept. 1, the U.S. Department of Agriculture Foreign Agricultural Service said Sept. 25. The sales are for delivery during the 2019/2020 marketing year, which started Sept. 1. The sales report came as China said it would begin buying U.S. agricultural products, including pork and soybeans, in response to President Donald Trump’s two-week postponement of tariffs on Chinese goods earlier this month (see 1909120046).
Key elements of the Treasury Department’s recently released proposed regulations on the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act include an expanded jurisdiction to review “non-controlling investments” and certain exemptions to reviews, Crowell Moring said in a Sept. 19 post.
Gilbert Kaplan, Commerce's undersecretary for international trade, resigned last week, a Commerce spokesperson said, declining to answer further questions. Kaplan's resignation came during an important week in trade negotiations with China as Chinese officials visited Washington to continue talks. Kaplan was confirmed to the role in 2018 after working as a trade lawyer with King & Spalding. The resignation was first reported by Bloomberg.
The Directorate of Defense Trade Controls IT Modernization team is updating the third-party function of its Defense Export Control and Compliance System (DECCS) application, the DDTC said Sept. 16. The changes, which take effect Sept. 20, will require third-party users to “use a dedicated account to access a company’s information,” the DDTC said. If users need “access to multiple companies” as a third party, they can register “multiple accounts using unique email addresses,” the DDTC said. Questions should be directed to the Defense Trade Application System help desk at dtradehelpdesk@state.gov or (202) 663-2838.
President Donald Trump renewed for one year authorities under the Trading With the Enemy Act with respect to Cuba, the White House said Sept. 13. The authorities, implemented by the Cuban Assets Control Regulations, block certain trade between U.S. and Cuba. They had been set to expire Sept. 14.
The State Department approved two potential sales of military goods to Morocco worth more than a combined $950 million, the Defense Security Cooperation Agency said Sept. 12. The first sale involves $776 million worth of “various TOW-2A missiles” and the second sale includes $209 million worth of F-16 ammunition, the DSCA said. The contractor for the first sale is Raytheon Missile Systems. The contractors for the second sale are Raytheon USA, Orbital ATK, General Dynamics, Kilgore Cheming Groupe, Cheming Groupe and Kaman Precision Products, the DSCA said.
The Aerospace Industries Association released its 2019 Facts & Figures report, saying aerospace and defense exports have steadily increased despite international market uncertainty. The report said an increasing demand for commercial aircraft, combined with emerging “markets and routes,” has caused exports to grow. This has been buoyed by a “rise in geopolitical threats” that has led to “increased spending on a global scale as allies in foreign markets continue to procure cutting-edge American technology.” The AIA expects growth to continue as U.S. allies, including those in East Asia and Europe, “increase their defense budgets to address common national security concerns.”