The State Department approved potential military sales to Australia and Guyana worth about $300 million combined, the Defense Security Cooperation Agency said Oct. 30. Under the proposed sales, Australia would get $46 million worth of Javelin missiles and related equipment. The sale will not require the “assignment” of a government contractor, the DSCA said. The sale to Guyana includes $256 million worth of Bell 412EPi and 429 helicopters. The principal contractor will be Bell Helicopter Textron.
Huawei is suing the Trump administration for not releasing documents more than a year after the Chinese technology company requested them. In the lawsuit, filed Oct. 30, Huawei said its Freedom of Information Act requests have been met with “a remarkable degree of stonewalling” and relate to the U.S. investigation into Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou, “trade relations” between the U.S. and China and “competition over the development of 5G technology.” Huawei named a range of U.S. agencies in the complaint, including the Bureau of Industry and Security and the Office of Foreign Assets Control.
The European Union wants to impose duties on $4 billion worth of U.S. imports in retaliation for illegal Boeing subsidies on Nov. 10, a recent Bloomberg report said. Member countries have until Nov. 3 to say which products should be retained on the list. The unnamed official who spoke to Bloomberg reporters said the plan to hike duties one week after the election would happen no matter which candidate wins the election.
The U.S. and the United Kingdom recently completed their most “intensive” round of free trade agreement trade talks and said almost all negotiations are in advanced stages, the U.K. said Nov. 2. The most recent round -- held Oct. 19 to Oct. 30 -- included discussions on market access, product-specific rules of origin and customs. The two sides said they agreed to a “programme for continued talks at official level for the weeks following the U.S. election.” The Office of the U.S Trade Representative did not comment.
The United Kingdom’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation amended two entries on its Burundi sanctions list, it said Nov. 2. The revisions update identifying information for government officials Godefroid Bizimana and Gervais Ndirakobuca.
The European Union extended by one year its sanctions regimes for Moldova and Burundi, the EU said Oct. 30. The regimes will be in force until Oct. 31, 2021.
The U.S. renewed a national emergency authorizing sanctions against Sudan despite suggesting that it was considering ending some restrictions, the White House said Nov. 2. “Despite recent positive developments,” the White House said, the crisis in Sudan “has not been resolved” and continues to threaten U.S. security.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control issued a sanctions advisory and guidance on Oct. 30 about the risks associated with dealing in high-value works of art. The guidance outlines which art markets may present sanctions risks and urges galleries, museums, agents, auctioneers and collectors to maintain a compliance program. OFAC also stressed that transactions involving expensive artwork are “not categorically exempt” from the Berman Amendment to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act and the Trading With the Enemy Act. The amendment “generally exempts” imports of art from IEEPA regulations, but OFAC said it does “not interpret this exemption to allow blocked persons or their facilitators to evade sanctions by exchanging financial assets such as cash, gold, or cryptocurrency for high-value artwork or vice versa.” OFAC said it will apply both IEEPA and TWEA sanctions on any art-related dealing involving a blocked person “to the extent the artwork functions primarily as an investment asset or medium of exchange.”
U.S. export controls on foundational technologies would impede U.S. innovation and do little to reduce national security concerns, the Computer and Communications Industry Association said in a letter to the Bureau of Industry and Security. The group urged BIS to construct a “narrowly tailored” export regime or risk stymieing U.S. leadership in a range of technologies.
The Hong Kong ambassador to the World Trade Organization told the U.S. ambassador there that Hong Kong is initiating a dispute, and wants formal bilateral consultations on the U.S. decision to require goods made in Hong Kong to be marked 'Made in China.'