The Commerce Department on July 8 issued a guidance on the transfer of gun export controls from the State Department (see 2001170030). The 62-page guidance, which includes more than 100 frequently asked questions, outlines Commerce’s approach to the controls, including licensing exceptions, arms reporting, export clearance requirements, recordkeeping and enforcement. The guidance also defines several “key terms” for exports that it now controls, such as the difference between additive manufacturing and 3D printing.
Rep. Rick Larsen, one of the chairpersons of the New Democrats' trade task force, told the Washington International Trade Association that he thinks the U.S. has not gotten any benefit out of the Trump administration's trade war. When asked by International Trade Today if a Joe Biden administration would roll back the Section 301 tariffs, even if China does not give concessions on industrial subsidies or state-owned enterprises, Larsen said, “I think the next administration needs to reset where we are, how we’re going to approach this.”
The United Kingdom’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation issued a July 6 guidance detailing how sanctioned people and entities can request changes or repeals of their designations. OFSI also released a “Sanctions Challenge Form” for “designated persons” to request a review of their designation.
The United Kingdom will begin processing export license applications for military exports to Saudi Arabia about one year after halting those licenses (see 1907180047), a July 7 notice said. The U.K., which had restricted licenses for exports of defense or military goods to Saudi Arabia that could be used for the conflict in Yemen, will now begin clearing that backlog of license applications and issuing decisions. The country’s Export Control Joint Unit said each application will be “carefully assessed” and could “take some months to clear this backlog.” It also said industry would expect delays in processing new applications until the backlog is cleared.
Export Compliance Daily is providing readers with some of the top stories for June 29 - July 2 in case you missed them.
The Department of Justice issued a forfeiture warrant and complaint for all petroleum products aboard four tankers that it alleged are illegally shipping Iranian oil to Venezuela. The ships -- the Bella, the Bering, the Pandi and the Luna -- allegedly are working with the U.S.-sanctioned Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to ship the oil and fund IRGC terrorist activities, DOJ said July 2. The four tankers are carrying more than 1 million barrels of gasoline combined, the agency said.
A federal appeals court upheld a conviction for a man who illegally exported electronics to Cuba. Bryan Singer had argued the court lacked evidence to convict him of knowingly shipping “303 Ubiquiti NanoStation M2 Network Modems” without a license, and said the U.S. failed to “prove he knew of the facts that made the NanoStations” subject to export controls. But the 11th Circuit denied Singer’s appeal. “The evidence admitted at trial established Singer's knowledge beyond a reasonable doubt,” a June 26 decision said.
The United Kingdom on July 6 set its first sanctions under its new human rights sanctions regime, designating 49 people and organizations because of human rights violations. The sanctions, which have been hinted at by officials for months and were expected this summer (see 2007020014 and 2001100046), marked the first time the U.K. has issued its own designations for human rights abuses, with additional sanctions expected in the coming months, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office said July 6. The U.K. also issued a sanctions guidance for industry and an outline of available licenses, and said European Union sanctions will continue to apply in the U.K. until it leaves the EU on Dec. 31.
The European Commission referred Austria, Belgium and the Netherlands to the European Union Court of Justice for failing to implement the EU’s anti-money laundering regulations, the commission said July 2. The referral includes a “request for financial sanctions,” the commission added. The commission also said the lack of implementation may affect information regarding corporate ownership of certain entities.
Testimony by Liz Truss, the United Kingdom's international trade secretary, revealed that no chapters have been closed yet in negotiations with the U.S., and suggests that barriers to U.S. exports of poultry and beef and price controls on pharmaceutical drugs continue to be sensitive areas for the British. Truss was updating Parliament about the second round of negotiations on a free trade agreement with the U.S.