RULE, RULE, WHO GETS THE RULE?: WILL RULES COMMITTEE SUPPORT DELLUMS-SPENCE EFFORT TO FIX FLAWED EXPORT CONTROL BILL?
(Washington, D.C.) Amidst all the
highly publicized congressional jockeying
for jurisdiction and control of the
health reform issue, a truly momentous
realignment of power in the House of
Representatives has gone almost
completely unnoticed: the recent
assertion of oversight authority for
national security-related export controls
by the House Armed Services Committee
(HASC). For the first time in memory, the
HASC succeeded this spring in obtaining
sequential referral of legislation, H.R.
3937, emanating from the House Foreign
Affairs Committee (HFAC) that would
overhaul — and eviscerate —
the Export Administration Act.(1)
As a result, the Armed
Services Committee was in a position to
provide the sort of “adult
supervision” of U.S. technology
transfer policy that has been so lacking
in recent years. With
astonishing bipartisan support, the HASC
adopted no fewer than thirty-two
amendments to H.R. 3937, substantially
rewriting its key provisions. The
Committee also unanimously issued a
report that sharply criticized the bill’s
principal authors — Reps. Sam Gejdenson
(D-CT) and Toby Roth (R-WI), chairman and
ranking member respectively of the HFAC
Subcommittee on Economic Policy, Trade
and Environment — for “severely
reduc[ing] the scope of current export
controls….[which] have been used to
stop the sale of materials that could
eventually harm U.S. military
personnel.”(2)
Among the noteworthy improvements to
H.R. 3937 proposed by the Armed Services
Committee were the following:
- Reestablishing a
Statutory Role for the Secretary
of Defense in Making Up the
Control List: Although
the HFAC version of H.R. 3937
would have stripped the Secretary
of Defense of any statutory role
in compiling the list of goods
and technologies subject to
export controls, the
Armed Services Committee
amendment reestablishes the
Defense Secretary’s authority as
provided in current law.
Additionally, the HASC bill would
prevent the Secretary of Commerce
from deleting items from the
control list without the
concurrence of the Secretary of
Defense. These provisions reflect
historical experience — namely,
that the Commerce Department, if
left to its own devices, would
approve virtually any
technology transfer to virtually any
end-user. - Restoring the Pentagon
Responsibility for Reviewing
Export Licenses: The
bill reported by the HFAC would
also have deprived the Secretary
of Defense of any statutory
authority to review applications
for export licenses in order to
determine whether or not the
proposed export would enhance the
military capabilities of American
foes to the detriment of U.S.
national security. The
Armed Services Committee
responded by giving the Defense
Secretary assured authority to
review licenses for products
related to weapons of mass
destruction. - Reestablishing a Sensible
Standard for Controlling Exports:
The Foreign Affairs’
version of H.R. 3937 would have
required a further narrowing of
the standard now used to judge
whether or not an export can be
controlled. Under the HFAC bill,
an export would have to be seen
as posing “a threat to the
national security,” a
definition which would be
difficult to prove in many cases
and would therefore unduly
constrain what is already an
inadequate list of controlled
technologies. The Armed
Services Committee restores the
standard under existing law which
authorizes export controls for
goods or technologies which could
“prove detrimental to the
national security” of the
United States. - Setting More Reasonable
Deadlines: The HFAC
substantially constrained the
time allotted to U.S. government
agencies involved in the export
license review process. For
example, the Commerce Department
would be given only 10 days
to act on a license application,
versus the 60 days provided by
current law. Although the Armed
Services Committee retains this
10-day time constraint for
licenses which do not require
referrals to other agencies, the
HASC would allow an additional 30
days for licenses which required
referral to other U.S. government
agencies. In a limited
number of precedent-setting
cases, this time deadline could
be extended further. - Adding Sanity to the
‘Foreign Availability Provision’:
The Armed Services Committee’s
bill would require that the
Secretary of Defense concur with
a determination of foreign
availability made by the
Secretary of Commerce.
Since positive findings of
foreign availability set in train
a process of permanently
decontrolling a good or
technology, such concurrence
provides an important check on an
incautious export licensing
program. Additionally, the Armed
Services Committee’s amendment
deletes a ridiculous provision in
the Foreign Affairs’ bill that
would have required the Secretary
of Commerce to decontrol anything
that would “be available in
fact within two years in the
future,” — a highly
speculative and subjective
standard. Importantly, the House
Armed Services Committee also
reestablishes the burden of proof
in foreign availability cases
back to where it belongs, i.e.,
from the U.S. government to the
would-be applicant. - Preventing Automatic
Decontrol of Computers: Significantly,
the Armed Services
Committee bill would prevent the
Secretary of Commerce from
automatically decontrolling
computers and computer technology
without the concurrence of the
Secretaries of Defense and
Energy. - Providing for Unilateral
Controls When Needed: The
Foreign Affairs Committee bill
would have effectively prevented
the President from imposing
unilateral controls as he would
have been required to certify
that there were “no other
alternative means” of
stopping the transfer abroad of
the technology or good in
question. The Armed Services
Committee amendment provides the
President with some leeway in
imposing export controls
unilaterally by removing the
excessively stringent “no
alternative means” standard. - Preventing Exclusive
Jurisdiction by Commerce over
Space Equipment: The
Armed Services Committee bill
deletes a provision included in
the Foreign Affairs’ mark-up that
would have given the Secretary of
Commerce exclusive
jurisdiction over space launch
equipment — including space
launch vehicles that are
indistinguishable from ballistic
missiles. Such an arrangement
will only exacerbate an already
acute problem involving, for
example, Commerce’s efforts to
push through approval of the sale
of a missile “bus”
capable of being used by China to
deploy Multiple Independently
Targetable Reentry Vehicles
(MIRVs) as well as commercial
satellites. - Requiring Licenses for
Sensitive Exports: The
Armed Services Committee version
of the EAA bill would also
require the President to compile
a list of the most sensitive
exports that should be withheld
from Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya,
Cuba and North Korea. Exporters
wishing to sell any of
these particular items anywhere
abroad must obtain licenses
to do so — improving the
likelihood that potential
diversions will be tracked.
The Intelligence Committee
Joins the Fray
Importantly, the House Armed Services
Committee was joined in its effort to
salvage the national security interests
jeopardized by the HFAC version of the
Export Administration Act by the House
Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence (HPSCI), which also insisted
on a review of the Foreign Affairs’ bill.
On 15 June 1994, the HPSCI addressed two
provisions with dangerous ramifications
for the U.S. intelligence community.
- Preventing Compromising
of Intelligence: First,
the Foreign Affairs Committee
bill would have required the
Central Intelligence Committee to
consolidate all of its
intelligence information bearing
on controlled end-users and to
have this material available to
the Commerce Department in
computerized form no later than
the end of this year. The
House Intelligence Committee
determined unanimously that this
provision would not only cause a
serious drain on CIA resources,
it would also violate the
important present requirement
that such classified information
remain compartmentalized and
compromise the protection of
sources. As a
consequence, the provision was
deleted. - Preventing Decontrol of
Encryption Technology: Second,
the Intelligence
Committee deleted a Foreign
Affairs Committee provision that
would have substantially
decontrolled encryption
technology viewed as “vital
to the U.S. intelligence
community.”(3)
The Committee notes, for example
that “the Committee recently
received a thorough, classified
briefing on the damaging
implications of altering the
present encryption export control
regime” and that “the
Committee on Foreign Affairs does
not adequately address the
national security interests put
at risk by the uncontrolled
export of encryption.”
Instead, a study by the President
on the international encryption
market is commissioned and
existing regulatory procedures
and authorities are kept in
place.
While there remain serious problems
with the reauthorization of the Export
Administration Act — such as the
creation of a license-free zone for
countries belonging to a multilateral
export control regime (e.g., the Missile
Technology Control regime) — the House
Armed Services Committee, as well as the
House Intelligence Committee, have
brought to bear a long-needed national
security focus to the subject of U.S.
export controls. As the Center for
Security Policy has chronicled over the
past five years, leaving this important
issue exclusively under the jurisdiction
of the House Foreign Affairs Committee
has been a damaging and costly mistake.
Portentous Promises to
Yeltsin
Never has this proposition
been more true, however, than it is at
present. After all, at their
summit on the margins of the Naples
Economic Summit, Russian President Boris
Yeltsin managed to secure a promise from
President Clinton that trade
restrictions on militarily critical
technologies will be lifted against
Russia in time for their next
scheduled rendezvous in Washington, D.C.
in late September. Obviously
well pleased with this pledge of
unprecedented access to state-of-the-art
military and related Western civil
technologies, Yeltsin crowed: “This
time we didn’t ask for money….As a
matter of fact we are a little displeased
at having received not even half of what
was promised to us in Tokyo in 1993, but
that’s not what’s most essential….
We’re saying, ‘Give us equal rights’ [to
trade relations on equal terms.]
The most colorful moment of the press
conference came when Yeltsin claimed he
was due no less than equal treatment
because, as he declared, “I’ve taken
that red, besmirched jacket off of
myself.” While President Yeltsin may
or may not continue to don the figurative
garb of the communist party apparatchik
he was until very recently, it is clear
that many others in the Russian
government find the present moment a
convenient one to dress as wolves in
sheep’s clothing in order to acquire
valuable dual use technology.(4)
Unless corrected through the
formal adoption by the full House of
Representatives of the Armed Services
Committee’s en bloc amendments
to the new Export Administration Act,
this legislation will serve greatly to
exacerbate the dangers posed by President
Clinton’s appalling prospective export
decontrol initiative.
The Bottom Line
The fate of the HASC
amendments, however, lies to a
considerable degree in the hands of the
House Rules Committee. It will meet
Tuesday afternoon to decide under what
circumstances the Armed Services
Committee’s amendments, a substitute
proposed by the Foreign Affairs Committee
and those that might be offered by other
Members of Congress will be in order.
With its decision, the Rules Committee
can do much to create conditions required
to fix H.R. 3937’s myriad defects — or
to fix the HASC’s “wagon” for
presuming to interfere in a wholesale
gutting of the Export Administration Act,
apparently orchestrated by Messrs.
Gejdenson and Roth with the enthusiastic
support of the Clinton Administration.
It can only be hoped that the Rules
Committee will permit a fair and honest
debate on the House Armed Services
Committee’s efforts to
“perfect” the EAA. The
consequences of its failure to do so will
be a perfect disaster:
adversaries around the globe (including,
quite possibly, in Russia) will be better
and more dangerously armed, thanks to
American technology, and Americans will
inevitably be faced with the need for
greater defenses to offset the dire
repercussions of the Clinton
Administration’s reckless abandon of
still-needed U.S. export controls.
– 30 –
1. For an analysis
of the House Foreign Affairs Committee
bill, see the Center’s Decision
Brief, Export Decontrolers Make
the Counter in U.S. Counter-Proliferation
Policy Stand for Counter-Productive
(No. 94-D 60,
14 June 1994).
2. House Armed
Services Committee Report, “Omnibus
Export Administration Act of 1994,”
17 June 1994, Rapt. 103-531, Part 4, p.
11.
3. House
Intelligence Committee Report,
“Omnibus Export Administration Act
of 1994,” 16 June 1994, Rapt.
103-531, Part 2, p. 3.
4. See the
Center’s Decision Brief, Restoration
Watch # 4: A Russian Weimar Republic Is
an Unworthy G-7 Partner, Unreliable Ally
(No. 94-D 70, 8
July 1994).
- Frank Gaffney departs CSP after 36 years - September 27, 2024
- LIVE NOW – Weaponization of US Government Symposium - April 9, 2024
- CSP author of “Big Intel” is American Thought Leaders guest on Epoch TV - February 23, 2024