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Where Dual-Use and Military Items Coincide – Proper Classification

Where Dual-Use and Military Items Coincide – Proper Classification. C5 – 4th Forum on Export Controls 8 February 2010 - Brussels Anita C. Esslinger, Partner - Bryan Cave 88 Wood Street, London EC2V 7AJ +44(0)20 3207 1224 acesslinger@bryancave.com. Special Thanks To .

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Where Dual-Use and Military Items Coincide – Proper Classification

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  1. Where Dual-Use and Military Items Coincide – Proper Classification C5 – 4th Forum on Export Controls 8 February 2010 - Brussels Anita C. Esslinger, Partner - Bryan Cave 88 Wood Street, London EC2V 7AJ +44(0)20 3207 1224 acesslinger@bryancave.com

  2. Special Thanks To • Kevin J. Wolf – Bryan Cave, Washington DC kwolf@bryancave.com, 001-202-508-6113 • Clif Burns – Bryan Cave, Washington DC clif.burns@bryancave.com, 001 202-508-6067 • Susan M. Kovarovics – Bryan Cave, Washington DC susan.kovarovics@bryancave.com, 001-202-508-6132 • Katherine L. Heubert – Bryan Cave, Washington DC katherine.heubert@bryancave.com, 001 202-508-6194 • Thomas Rothaermel – Bryan Cave, Hamburg Thomas.Rothaermel@bryancave.com, 0049 4030 3316 133 • Joseph Smallhoover – Bryan Cave, Paris Joseph.Smallhoover@bryancave.com, 0032 1 4417 7710

  3. US Military Controls – Relevance to European Companies • Extra-territorial effect • Control not just exports from the US, but also reexports and transfers to unauthorised persons by any person of US military items • “See through rule” controls reexports and transfers of US controlled military items incorporated into foreign produced products • Control derivative items – data or hardware that is derived from the U.S. origin ITAR-controlled goods and which may be produced or manufactured from ITAR-controlled technical data or defense services

  4. US Military Controls – Relevance to European Companies • Examples • QRS11 - quartz rate sensors used in commercial aircraft • Qioptiq S.a.r.l. Consent Agreement and Order December 2008 -- $25 million civil penalty (including $10 million for remedial compliance measures) • Interturbine Aviation Logistics GmbH Consent Agreement November 2009. January 2010 -- $1 million civil penalty – causing an unauthorised export and unauthorised transfer

  5. Penalties: Qioptiq • In December 2008, Qioptiq S.a.r.l. agreed to pay $25 million in fines for ITAR-violations for, among other violations, export of ITAR controlled technology to a variety of countries, including: • export to China of ITAR technical data, “original and derivative” • export to Iran of hardware, manufacturing equipment, technical data and know-how involving derivative designs “based in part on U.S. origin ITAR technical data exported to Singapore” • export to Cyprus of “night vision equipment involving derivative designs based in part on U.S. origin ITAR technical data” and “components that were derived from ITAR technical data”

  6. ITAR-Free Products? U.S. and foreign companies in the aircraft parts and other industries have become more aggressive in the use of “ITAR-Free” certifications.

  7. What Does ITAR-Free Mean? • None of the parts, components, or other end-items supplied to buyer are “defense articles.” • Buyers are concerned about see through rule tainting its end-item, thus requiring US Government approval to transfer foreign-made end-item.

  8. What Does ITAR-Free Mean? • None of the technical data or services from which the buyer’s items are produced or manufactured were ITAR-controlled. • Clause 124.8(5) relating to Manufacturing License Agreements and Technical Assistance Agreements involving ITAR-controlled technical data require State Department approval before any such items are transferred to a third country or a national of a third country

  9. Jurisdictional Determinations • Precise jurisdictional determinations are the most fundamental and most important part of any export control compliance program. • If item is subject to the jurisdiction to the ITAR, then there are almost always significant licensing requirements • If not, then it depends.

  10. US Controls - Questions to Answer 1. What is at issue, i.e., hardware, software, or information (“item”), or a service? 2. What is the jurisdictional status of the item or service, i.e., defense item or service controlled by the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (“ITAR”), or is it controlled by the Export Administration Regulations (“EAR”) or by another agency?

  11. US Controls - Questions to Answer 3. What is the classification status of the item or service, i.e., if EAR-controlled, what is its Export Control Classification Number (“ECCN”), or, if ITAR-controlled, what is its U.S. Munitions List (“USML”) subcategory number?

  12. US Military Controls • International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) promulgated pursuant to the Arms Export Control Act (AECA) govern • Exports, reexports and transfers, plus temporary imports of Defense Articles • Defense Articles = Controlled Hardware, Technical Data, Software • Listed on the US Munitions List • Exports of Defense Services

  13. US Military Controls • US State Department’s Directorate of Defense Controls (DDTC) is charged with interpretation and enforcement of the ITAR • Together with other relevant US Government agencies (principally the US Department of Defense), it is has the final say as to which items and services are subject to ITAR jurisdiction

  14. Export Administration Regulations • Export Administration Regulations (EAR) govern the export of items “subject to the EAR” which are listed on the EAR’s Commerce Control List (CCL) • The EAR are administered by the US Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS)

  15. Export Administration Regulations • Items subject to the EAR are generally most items other than defense articles, technology and software • Although other agencies may exercise licensing jurisdiction over other kinds of items, such as nuclear materials, controlled substances • US sanctions regulations, such as those relating to Cuba and Iran, administered by the Office of Foreign Assets Controls (OFAC) may overlap and override EAR controls

  16. Export Administration Regulations • Items “subject to the EAR” are often called Dual-Use items • Misleading term – does not mean items used for both commercial and military applications

  17. ITAR Trumps EAR • If an item is subject to the jurisdiction of the ITAR, it is not controlled by the EAR • Even if the CCL specifically describes item • Even if BIS has classified item in a specific written ruling

  18. US Military Controls • Under the AECA, the President is authorized to “designate those items which shall be considered as defense articles and defense services . . . and to promulgate regulations for the import and export of such articles and services.” • The items so designated constitute the United States Munitions List (USML) • Not just “munitions” • Is this list all inclusive?

  19. What is ITAR Controlled? • Final jurisdictional determinations must be based on the specific words in the relevant USML subcategories because: • Not all subcategories are worded in the same way

  20. Defense Article§120.6 • Any item or technical data designated in the USML • Includes: technical data recorded or stored in any physical form, models, mockups, or other items that reveal technical data directly relating to items designated in the USML • Excludes: basic marketing information on function or purpose or general system descriptions

  21. What is ITAR Controlled? • Some ITAR categories also control associated equipment • Term is not defined except as a subset of accessories and attachments

  22. What is ITAR Controlled? • All USML subcategories control technical data, software and defense services “directly related” to the defense articles listed in the subcategory.

  23. Technical Data § 120.10 • Information that is required for the design, development, production, manufacture, assembly, operation, repair, testing, maintenance or modification of defense articles

  24. Technical Data (and Software) § 120.10 • Includes: information in the form of blueprints, drawings, photographs, plans, instructions or documentation; classified information relating to defense articles and defense services; and software directly related to defense articles • Excludes: information concerning general scientific, mathematical or engineering principles commonly taught in schools, colleges and universities; information in the public domain; and basic marketing information on function or purpose or general system descriptions of defense articles

  25. Defense Service§ 120.9 • The furnishing of assistance (including training) to foreign persons, whether in the US or abroad in the design, development, engineering, manufacture, production, assembly, testing, repair, maintenance, modification, operations, demilitarization, destruction, processing or use of defense articles • The furnishing to foreign persons of any ITAR-controlled technical data whether in the US or abroad

  26. Defense Service§ 120.9 • Military training of foreign units and forces, regular and irregular, including formal or informal instruction of foreign persons in the U.S. or abroad or by correspondence courses, technical, educational, or information publications and media of all kinds, training aid, orientation, training exercise, and military advice

  27. Defense Service • Provision of defense services is controlled by the ITAR even if no ITAR-controlled technical data is provided and even if information relied upon in performing the defense services is in the public domain or otherwise exempt from licensing under the ITAR

  28. Derivative Items • Controlled technical data and hardware includes the data or hardware transferred under a license or agreement and often data or hardware that is derived from the U.S. origin ITAR-controlled goods • Examples: • a drawing developed abroad using information from an ITAR controlled U.S. drawing transferred pursuant to a TAA or MLA • hardware developed abroad using U.S. technical data that was transferred under a license containing a proviso capturing items derived from that data

  29. Controlled Under Agreements • § 124.8(5) language must be included in all MLAs and TAAs • “…and any defense article which may be produced or manufactured from such technical data or defense service may not be transferred to a person in a third country or a national of a third country except as specifically authorized…”

  30. Controlled Under Export Licenses • DDTC can “proviso in” limitations and restrictions when approving an export license application • Provisos capturing derivative items can be added to licenses • Always ask to see provisos and limitations on export licenses under which you receive data or hardware

  31. Controlled under USML Categories • USML Categories that do not explicitly include derivative item language should not be assumed to exclude derivative items • DDTC takes a broad view of its authority to regulate derivative items as ITAR-controlled, even if a defense against their interpretation exists • This broad view is reflected in the recent Qioptiq Consent Agreement

  32. “See Through” Rule • ITAR-controlled defense articles DO NOT lose their identity as ITAR-controlled articles even if they are incorporated into higher level assemblies or end products made outside the United States • Unlike the EAR, the ITAR do not have a “de minimis” threshold which permits lower amounts of U.S. controlled content incorporated into foreign-made items to be released from U.S. export controls

  33. “See Through” Rule • The ITAR “sees through” the end-item to find the ITAR-controlled component • Reexport/reetransfer authorization requirements continue to apply to the ITAR component—even after incorporation • The term “See Through Rule” is not in the ITAR, and the ITAR does not contain a citation to explain the principle

  34. US Munitions List (USML)§120.3 • Includes any article or service designated as (or determined in the future to be) specifically designed, developed, configured, adapted, or modified for a military application, and: • has neither predominant civil applications nor performance equivalents (defined by form, fit and function) to those of an article or service used for civil applications; or • has significant military or intelligence applicability such that control is necessary

  35. What is ITAR Controlled? • Broadly speaking: was the item – regardless of how it is used now: • originally specifically designed, developed, configured, adapted, or modified in any way • for a military application, military end-item or a commercial satellite, spacecraft, or launch end-item or application? • At the heart is the intent of the designer or modifier of the part or component at the time it was designed or modified

  36. Practical Tip • DDTC has virtually unfettered discretion, as a practical matter, on jurisdictional determinations and in interpreting the ITAR • Accordingly, there is not much scope for self-determination and it is often advisable to seek a “Commodity Jurisdiction” or “CJ” from DDTC

  37. DDTC Policy • Use caution if item was specifically designed or modified for a military application but now has • a predominant civil application • performance equivalents to items with civil applications and/or • no significant military or intelligence applicability

  38. DDTC Policy • ITAR section 120.3 cites these three criteria as policy considerations regarding when an article may be designated or determined in the future to be a defense article • BUT according to the ITAR, DDTC, not the exporter, may consider such factors when adding items to the USML, responding to requests to resolve doubts about the jurisdictional status of an item or removing an article from the ITAR’s jurisdiction

  39. DDTC Policy • Under the ITAR, policy factors are not applied in a self-determination by the exporter of whether an item is subject to the ITAR

  40. DDTC Policy • If item was specifically designed or modified for a military application and now has one of the three characteristics in the policy section, the procedure described in the ITAR is to submit a CJ request asking DDTC to determine that the item is not ITAR controlled

  41. “See Through Rule” • QRS11: March 2006 Boeing Consent Agreement with DDTC: • Executive Order 11958 and the Arms Export Control Act (“AECA”) “authorize [DDTC] to designate what is a defense article or a defense service and [the ITAR] require written authorization before such articles are exported regardless of whether the underlying defense article is used in a commercial system or product. [The ITAR], through the Commodity Jurisdiction (§ 120.4) process, is the only official mechanism by which questions regarding jurisdiction and categorization may be addressed.”

  42. Meaning of Consent Agreement • Paragraph 5 of the Consent Agreement does not mean exporters cannot make self-determinations about whether something is or is not ITAR controlled. • Rather, it means that if something is (i) on the US Munitions List or (ii) declared by DDTC to be ITAR controlled, then only DDTC can declare it to be EAR controlled through the Commodity Jurisdiction (“CJ”) process.

  43. Specific USML Categories • Subcategory VIII(h) controls • Components, parts, accessories, attachments, and associated equipment . . . specifically designed or modified for the articles listed in the preceding Category VIII subsections, which include aircraft specifically designed, modified, or equipped for military purposes

  44. Specific USML Categories • Subcategory VIII(h) applies if designer or modifier intended that part or component be • designed (i.e., planned) or • modified (i.e., changed or altered in any way) specifically (i.e., particularly) for a controlled military aircraft (even if part or component is no more sophisticated than a similar item for use with a commercial end-item)

  45. Specific USML Categories • Subcategory VIII(h) does not apply if designer or modifier intended that part or component was not only for defense article, but also for non-defense article • Even if first actual use was for a defense article

  46. New “Note” to Cat. VIII • A new Note makes now easier to make a self-determination that a standard part or component installed on a civil aircraft or civil aircraft engine covered by a FAA type certificate is, with few exceptions, not ITAR-controlled. • Formal CJ determinations are not required to make these decisions under the new Note except when there is doubt about the Note’s applicability or if installations involve items identified in the ITAR as “significant military equipment” that were not installed prior to August 14, 2008.

  47. Implication of Cat. VIII Control • Prior to its addition of the new Note, subcategory VIII(h) had only one published criterion for determining whether a part or component was ITAR-controlled – whether it was specifically designed or modified for a military aircraft, a military aircraft engine, or a related military end-item. • If so, the part or component required a license from the State Department to export or re-export regardless of its age, sophistication, size, spookiness, cost, similarity to other civil parts, or incorporation into a civil end-item.

  48. 5 Parts of New Note According to the new Note, an aircraft or aircraft engine part or component is not ITAR controlled if it is: • “standard equipment;” • “covered by a civil aircraft type certificate (including amended type certificates and supplemental type certificates) issued by the [FAA] for a civil, non-military aircraft;” • “an integral part of [i.e., installed in] such civil aircraft;”

  49. 5 Parts of New Note cont. • not new “significant military equipment” to be installed on civil aircraft or civil aircraft engines on or after August 14, 2008; and • not controlled by another category on the USML.

  50. Other USML Categories & USML Catch-All Category • Before supplying an item for use on a civil aircraft, all USML categories -- and the “Note” to Category VIII -- must be reviewed • Be mindful of USML Catch-All Miscellaneous Articles Category XXI – Any article not specifically enumerated in the other categories which has substantial military applicability and which has been specifically designed, developed, configured, adapted or modified for military purposes.

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