The State Department's Directorate of Defense Trade Controls recently posted the presentations and white papers from its last Defense Trade Advisory Group plenary in December. During the plenary, industry officials recommended that the agency scale down the International Traffic in Arms Regulations’ brokering reporting rules to reduce filing burdens for the defense industry (see 2412050023). Another presentation focused on issues surrounding controlled reexports and retransfers of legacy equipment; a third presentation focused on the barriers, inefficiencies and opportunities related to co-production, codevelopment, and co-sustainment of defense articles within U.S. international trade laws. DDTC also posted the minutes from the meeting along with other documents.
The State Department sent a final rule for interagency review that would amend restrictions against Cyprus under the International Traffic in Arms Regulations. The rule, sent July 31 to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, could build on past measures to relax export restrictions on certain defense goods and services involving the country (see 2409260011). The State Department has renewed those relaxed restrictions for Cyprus each year since 2020, with the latest renewal scheduled to expire Sept. 30.
The State Department’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls on July 29 updated its list of commodity jurisdiction determinations for items and services controlled under the U.S. Munitions List. The new determinations cover certain antennas, an anti-tank projectile, a laser range finder, a radiofrequency switch and more.
The U.S., Australia and the U.K. need to make more items eligible for defense trade exemptions under the AUKUS partnership, an Australian researcher said last week.
A senior State Department official declined to say this week whether the Trump administration is considering withdrawing from the Australia-U.K.-U.S. (AUKUS) security partnership, but she said the administration is generally in favor of the partnership.
The House Foreign Affairs Committee approved several bills July 22 aimed at speeding up the foreign arms sales process, strengthening the Australia-U.K.-U.S. (AUKUS) partnership and enhancing certain Iran sanctions.
The State Department’s Defense Export Control and Compliance System's advisory opinions application will undergo system maintenance from 2 to 5 p.m. EDT July 25. "Industry users may experience service degradation, interruptions, or limited application functionality within DECCS during this maintenance window," the agency said. "If you experience any issues, please log back in after the maintenance window."
The U.S. should take several steps to reduce red tape and streamline arms sales and technology transfers to close trading partners, including more frequently reviewing the jurisdiction of export-controlled items and combining reviews of weapons requests from allies, researchers said in a new report.
The State Department is revising the International Traffic in Arms Regulations to align with recent U.N. Security Council decisions involving the Democratic Republic of Congo, Haiti, Libya, Somalia, Central African Republic, South Sudan and Sudan. The agency’s final rule, effective July 7, also updates the list of NATO members and major non-NATO allies and makes other corrections and clarifications to the ITAR.
President Donald Trump on June 30 signed an executive order to remove certain financial sanctions against Syria and authorize the "relaxation" of export controls against the country, part of broader effort to support Syria's "path to stability and peace," the White House said.