The United Kingdom and the European Union postponed trade negotiations this week due to the coronavirus pandemic, the European Commission said March 12. Both sides are “exploring alternative ways to continue discussions,” the commission said, including through video conferences. The U.K. released its approach to negotiations with the EU last month (see 2002270064) and was scheduled to begin negotiations this month (see 2002250030).
The Treasury and State departments have struggled to fill positions related to sanctions implementation and enforcement despite increased funding for sanctions resources, according to a March 11 Government Accountability Office report. Positions have been difficult to fill due to competition from the private sector and a lengthy security clearance process, the GAO said, circumstances that have especially affected the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control and State’s Office of Economic Sanctions Policy and Implementation. Vacancies ranged from 6% to 26% of its “authorized full time equivalents (FTEs).” GAO said State was authorized to hire six FTEs during the start of the 2020 fiscal year even though more than half of its “authorized persons” were vacant at the start of the year.
Five Senate Democrats asked the European Union to sanction a U.S.-designated Russian national for his involvement in U.S. election interference, according to a March 12 letter. In the letter, Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, Bob Menendez, D-N.J., Jack Reed, D-R.I., and Mark Warner, D-Va., said Yevgeniy Prigozhin and his firms, which include the Wagner Group, a Russian paramilitary organization, are “actively engaged in spreading malign influence.” Due to the “broad reach and expanding nature of Prigozhin and the Wagner group’s malign activities abroad, we urge the European Union to take steps to constrain their ability to operate and to deter the Kremlin from engaging in these activities.” The senators added that U.S. sanctions are “only as strong as our multilateral alliances,” and said U.S. pressure would be “significantly enhanced” with EU collaboration.
The Trump administration is prioritizing efforts surrounding its export controls, investment screening and diplomacy to restrict China from acquiring sensitive dual-use technologies, a senior State Department official said. The official, speaking to reporters March 12, said China has ramped up technology theft and said companies and research institutions should be cautious of any attempts by Chinese companies to divert their products for military end-use, which are often masked in “incentives and inducements.”
The Commerce Department Bureau of Industry and Security added 24 entities to its Entity List and revised five existing entries, the agency said in a notice. The new entries include companies in China, Iran, Pakistan, Russia and the United Arab Emirates; and the revised entries are for entities in France, Iran, Lebanon, Singapore and the United Kingdom. The changes take effect March 16. All shipments now requiring a license as a result of this rule that were on dock for loading or aboard a carrier to a port as of that date may proceed to their destinations under the previous eligibility, BIS said.
A top Commerce Department official tempered fears that the U.S. wants to stifle industry competitiveness (see 2003100044 and 2002180060) as it considers further restricting exports to Huawei and China, saying that is not the administration's goal. “Why would you restrict a U.S. company if you're only going to be enabling their competitor?” said Rich Ashooh, Commerce’s assistant secretary for export administration. “That’s a very important principle to engage in.”
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The American Association of Port Authorities canceled its March 17-19 conference in Washington, D.C., to protect the health of attendees.
European Union Trade Commissioner Phil Hogan, who was scheduled to give a speech in Washington next week, canceled his trip because of the coronavirus pandemic, a spokesman said. The groups that had invited him to speak canceled the events. The cancelation was made before Trump announced that non-citizens and non-green card holders would not be allowed to fly between the EU countries that have open borders and the U.S. That ban does not cover Ireland, Hogan's home country, but does cover Belgium, where the EU has its headquarters.
China’s Commerce Ministry said the coronavirus pandemic will have an “unavoidable” impact on its supply chains and the global economy but reassured industry that the changes will not be permanent. “Global economic and trade growth is under pressure. The resumption of production and new orders by Chinese foreign trade companies will also be affected,” a ministry official said, according to an unofficial translation of transcript of a March 12 press conference. “The supply chain of the global industrial chain will be disrupted to some extent.”