The State Department’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls should publish guidance and take other steps to help expedite approvals for marketing demonstrations and other “pre-delivery activities” that occur before a foreign military sale, industry officials told the agency during its Defense Trade Advisory Group plenary last week. Officials also gave a host of other recommendations aimed at addressing issues plaguing the FMS program, including fixes that could help other agencies understand when a license isn’t required.
The Bureau of Industry and Security this week will officially extend authorizations for South Korean semiconductor companies Samsung and SK Hynix to allow them to continue supplying certain controlled chip equipment to their Chinese factories. The move -- which formalizes authorizations that have applied to both companies since the agency issued its China chip rule Oct. 7, 2022 -- underscores the importance of the Korean chip industry to global semiconductor supply, BIS officials said.
A group of European countries not in the EU aligned with a recent EU sanctions decision on those who undermine Ukraine's sovereignty, the European Council announced. On Sept. 14, the council renewed for six months, until March 15, the sanctions regime. North Macedonia, Montenegro, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway also imposed the decision, the council said.
Switzerland added five Russian companies to its sanctions list to align with the EU's decision to add the entities in September, the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs announced, according to an unofficial translation. The five companies -- RT Balkan, Oriental Review, New Eastern Outlook, Katehon and Tsargrad -- are Russian broadcasters.
President Joe Biden this week renewed a national emergency authorizing certain sanctions related to Syria, the White House said. The situation in Syria "undermines the campaign to defeat the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria" and threatens civilians, peace and security in the region, the White House said. The emergency for Syria was renewed for one year from Oct. 14.
The U.S. could impose new sanctions or tighten existing ones against Hamas in response to the group’s recent attacks on Israel, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said, speaking to reporters ahead of annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in Marrakesh, Morocco. She said those decisions are under consideration.
The Treasury Department this week sanctioned two ship owners in Turkey and the United Arab Emirates, along with their two vessels, for transporting Russian oil sold above the global price cap set by the U.S. and its allies. The agency also issued a new general license authorizing certain transactions with the two sanctioned ship owners and, together with the Group of 7 countries and Australia, published a new price cap guidance and advisory outlining best practices for the maritime oil industry.
The State Department’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls is drafting at least two rules to make “targeted revisions” to the U.S. Munitions List and is preparing to soon propose changes to its registration fees, said Timothy Betts, DDTC’s acting deputy assistant secretary. Betts also said the State Department is looking to hire a DDTC-dedicated attorney adviser and stressed the importance of defense companies having compliance buy-in from upper management.
The Bureau of Industry and Security is amending the Commerce Control List to implement changes agreed to during the 2022 Wassenaar Arrangement plenary, the agency said in an interim final rule released this week. The rule, effective Oct. 18, includes control parameter changes and editorial revisions to more than 50 Export Control Classification Numbers across Categories 1-10 of the CCL. BIS also is seeking public comments on a change that would restrict the use of License Exception STA (Strategic Trade Authorization) for certain countries when exporting technology used to develop certain supersonic aero gas turbine engine components.
The European Council on Oct. 9 extended its sanctions regime on Nicaragua until Oct. 15, 2024. The restrictions apply to 21 people and three entities involved either in "serious human rights violations or abuses," the repression of civil society or in actions that undermine democracy and the rule of law in the Central American nation.