President Donald Trump said he does not want to make it more difficult to export U.S. goods, adding that he has “instructed” his administration to make it easier for countries to do business with the U.S. “The United States cannot, & will not, become such a difficult place to deal with in terms of foreign countries buying our product, including for the always used National Security excuse, that our companies will be forced to leave in order to remain competitive,” Trump said in a series of Feb. 18 tweets. He added that the U.S. wants to sell to “China and other countries” and “We don’t want to make it impossible to do business with us. That will only mean that orders will go to someplace else.”
Discussions within the Commerce Department to expand U.S. export control jurisdiction over foreign exports to Huawei and beyond would have a chilling effect on the U.S. semiconductor industry, said John Neuffer, president of the Semiconductor Industry Association. Neuffer said current U.S. export restrictions on Huawei are already hurting the industry’s ability to sell to China -- which represents about 35% of U.S. semiconductor sales -- and more restrictions would further alienate Chinese customers who are weary of being added to Commerce’s Entity List. “Some of them are afraid they’re next,” Neuffer said during a Feb. 18 panel hosted by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation.
Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., introduced a bill that would achieve a result similar to that of a rule Commerce is reportedly considering on Huawei export controls (see 2002130014), he said in a news release. Currently, goods made outside the U.S. with less than 25 percent U.S. content can be sold to Huawei -- or any other company on the entity list -- without a special license (see 1905220027). The Commerce Department has discussed lowering that de minimis threshold to 10 percent, though it has not yet issued a proposed rule.
Venezuela said it is “not intimidated” by recent U.S. designations against its airline and plans to ignore the sanctions by more than doubling its international destinations, according to an unofficial translation of a Feb. 12 report from Venezolana de Television, a state-owned news outlet. Even before U.S. sanctions were announced against the Venezuelan airline and its fleet of more than 35 planes (see 2002070041), the country said it received warnings from other countries that they would no longer supply the fleet with fuel, the report said. But Venezuela said its planes can fly up to 14 hours “without needing to be supplied at another airport that is not in national territory.” The report added that the country is working on manufacturing “the first aircraft on Venezuelan soil” and wants to add hundreds of planes.
Ukraine recently revoked all of its special economic sanctions imposed by the country’s Department of Economy, Trade and Agriculture before Feb. 7, according to a Feb. 7 post from Baker McKenzie, referencing a notice from Ukraine. The move, which will lift sanctions on about 27,000 companies, will take effect March 6, the post said. The sanctions removals do not affect sanctions issued by Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council.
The United Kingdom’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation amended its entry for Seka Baluku under designations related to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, according to a Feb. 13 notice. Baluku, leader of the Allied Democratic Forces, a Uganda-based terrorist organization, is still subject to an asset freeze. He was sanctioned by the U.K. and the United Nations Security Council earlier this month (see 2002070010).
The Commerce Department Bureau of Industry and Security asked for an 8% boost in funding for the 2021 fiscal year to increase export control compliance and enforcement, bolster initiatives to counter China, and to better identify emerging and foundational technologies. BIS’s request for a $10 million budget increase, submitted to Congress last week, comes as the agency plans to roll out a series of export controls on sensitive technologies (see 1912160032), which will increase its involvement in the Trump administration's effort to sustain the U.S.'s technological advantage over China. BIS specifically asked for just over $1 million and five new positions to help it control emerging and foundational technologies and enforce those controls.
California-based Alpha and Omega Semiconductor is being investigated by the Justice Department for export control violations relating to shipments to Huawei, the company said in a Feb. 5 press release. The company said it has been ordered by the Commerce Department to stop all shipments to Huawei and is working with the agency to “resolve this issue.” The semiconductor company has an export control compliance program in place and is committed “to comply fully” with U.S. export laws, but said it expects revenue hits due to penalties “incurred in connection with the investigation” and by the “Huawei shipment interruption.”
The State Department announced penalties on foreign entities for illegal transfers under the Iran, North Korea and Syria Nonproliferation Act, the agency said in a notice. The entities transferred items subject to multilateral control lists -- such as the Wassenaar Arrangement -- that contribute to weapons proliferation or missile production. The entities mentioned in the notice include companies based in China, Iraq, Russia and Turkey and are barred from purchasing items controlled on the U.S. Munitions List and by the Arms Export Control Act. In addition, the State Department will suspend any current export licenses used by the companies; State will bar them from receiving new export licenses for any goods subject to the Export Administration Regulations; and government agencies are barred from entering into procurement contracts with them. The measures took effect Feb. 3.
The United Kingdom’s Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation renewed the designations for three entries under its terrorist asset-freezing regime, according to a Feb. 12 notice. The entries are: Hazan Izz-Al-Din, Abdelkarim Al-Nasser and Ibrahim Al-Yacoub.