The Biden administration should better use sanctions to convince the Mexican government to take stronger actions against drug cartels, Republicans on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee wrote in a June 21 letter to the Treasury and State departments. The lawmakers, led by Sen. Jim Risch of Idaho, the committee’s top Republican, said Mexico has turned a “blind eye” toward its cartels, and the Biden administration should sanction state and local Mexican officials “who directly support or enable" them.
A bipartisan bill introduced in the Senate this week could allow the U.S. to better target sanctions evasion by rewarding information leading to the arrest or conviction of evaders. The Sanctions Evasion Whistleblower Rewards Act, introduced in part by Sen. Jim Risch of Idaho, the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, would expand the State Department’s Rewards for Justice program to offer rewards for “information about the identity or location of individuals and entities that defy sanctions imposed” by the U.S. or the U.N., the lawmakers said.
House Select Committee on China Chair Mike Gallagher, R-Wis., is asking the Commerce Department for export licensing information involving Chinese companies with ties to Beijing’s expanding “signals intelligence” presence in Cuba. In a June 20 letter to Commerce and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, Gallagher said China’s reported effort to expand its military and spy facilities in Cuba (see 2306130062) is likely being “aided” by Chinese telecommunications companies, including those that have violated U.S. export controls to acquire American intellectual property.
CBP is inching closer to mandating electronic export manifest, with rail EEM the farthest along but air EEM still needing work, said David Garcia, program manager of the agency’s outbound enforcement and policy branch. Garcia said the agency is aiming to publish them in the Federal Register “within the next year or two.”
World Trade Organization members held an informal talk June 16 on efforts to revise the global trade body's "deliberative functions." Members discussed the WTO's General Council, Trade Negotiations Committee, the "conduct of Ministerial Conferences" and generating greater member participation in WTO bodies. Members also discussed "other trade-related matters," "effective oversight and decision-making" in the Ministerial Conference and the General Council, and ways to ensure the Trade Negotiations Committee "effectively plays its supervising role for the overall conduct of the negotiations." Botswana's Athaliah Lesiba Molokomme, who chairs the General Council, said she is considering holding consultations before the next General Council meeting set for July 24-25 to finalize an "emerging roadmap for MC13 on the deliberative function." MC13, the 13th Ministerial Conference, is set for February 2024 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and the committee's top Republican, Mike Crapo of Idaho, asked President Joe Biden to press India on an array of trade irritants for U.S. exporters, including sanitary and phytosanitary restrictions that discriminate against growers, restrictions on biotechnology, and high tariffs on agriculture imports, including "apples, blueberries, cherries, dairy, nuts, pears, chickpeas, lentils, potatoes, and alcoholic beverages."
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The Bureau of Industry and Security is working “day-in and day-out” on a final rule that will make tweaks to its China-related chip export controls released in October (see 2210070049), said BIS Senior Export Policy Analyst Sharron Cook. But a public release of the rule isn’t imminent -- the agency hasn’t yet sent the changes to be reviewed by other agencies, said Hillary Hess, regulatory policy director at BIS.
The Treasury Department should “assess” whether the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. has the jurisdiction to review the Saudi-backed LIV Golf’s purchase of the PGA Tour, two Democrats said in a June 16 letter to Treasury Secretary Yellen. Sen. Sherrod Brown, chair of the Senate Banking Committee, and Rep. Maxine Waters, the top Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, said that if CFIUS has jurisdiction over the deal, the committee should “resolve any national security risks related to the transaction.”
The chairmen of the House Small Business Committee and the House Select Committee on China are asking for a detailed briefing by the end of June on DOJ's efforts to combat Chinese intellectual property theft.