US to revamp export system to strengthen national security
April 21st, 2010 - 8:05 am ICT by IANS
Washington, April 21 (IANS) US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said Tuesday that the US will revamp its Cold War era export control system to enhance national security.
Gates made the statement to members of Business Executives for National Security at a Washington function. He said the current export control system does not adequately protect crucial US capabilities and makes it nearly impossible to quickly share needed capabilities with allies and partners, Xinhua reported.
“The US is thought to have one of the most stringent export regimes in the world, but stringent is not the same as effective,” Gates said, noting the current export-control system is a Cold War artifact, and not set up to deal effectively with 21st century situations.
Gates proposed a tiered approach to export control that he said would allow the US to build higher walls around sensitive defence technologies while lowering walls around others.
“Our plan relies on four key reforms: a single export-control list, a single licensing agency, a single enforcement-coordination agency and a single information technology system,” Gates said.
The United States currently has two export-control lists, with one maintained at the State Department and the other by Commerce.
After Gates made the statement, the White House released a fact sheet outlining key recommendations of an interagency study directed by President Barack Obama on export control.
“The assessment found that the current US export control system does not sufficiently reduce national security risk based on the fact that its structure is overly complicated, contains too many redundancies, and tries to protect too much,” the fact sheet said, proposing a phased reform of the system.
The fact sheet said the goal of the reform is “to build high walls around a smaller yard” by focusing enforcement efforts on a few “crown jewels.”
“The single list, combined with a single licensing agency, would allow us to concentrate on controlling those critical technologies and items — the ‘crown jewels’ — that are the basis for maintaining our military technology advantage, especially technologies and items that no foreign government or company can duplicate,” Gates said.
- US move to ease dual technology export control - Aug 31, 2010
- US removes ISRO, DRDO from export control list - Jan 25, 2011
- US lifts 12-year export controls on Indian space, defence cos. (Lead) - Jan 25, 2011
- 'India's full membership in export control regimes, next logical step' - Apr 18, 2012
- US Entity List removal not of much help: India - Nov 16, 2011
- US to reform high-tech export laws for India - Oct 21, 2010
- After waiver, Indian defence units look for US components - Jan 28, 2011
- CII lauds US export control reforms in defence, space sectors - Jan 28, 2011
- US to reform high-tech export laws for India (Lead) - Oct 21, 2010
- White House issues fact sheets on Obama's India visit - Nov 09, 2010
- US wants to expand military ties with India, eyes fighter deal - Sep 24, 2010
- 'India to discuss relaxation in US export control regime on dual use items with Obama' - Nov 03, 2010
- No US waiver to DRDO on technology imports: Antony - Aug 02, 2011
- Arms for Pakistan, export curbs top Antony's US agenda - Sep 27, 2010
- Chinese weapons fall into hands of militants: WikiLeaks - Feb 03, 2011
Tags: barack obama, business executives for national security, coordination agency, crown jewels, defence secretary, defence technologies, enforcement coordination, enforcement efforts, export control system, export system, information technology system, interagency study, licensing agency, national security risk, redundancies, robert gates, secretary robert, security gates, system gates, tiered approach