US state dept expects to finalise Aukus trade exemptions in the next 120 days

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President Joe Biden’s 120-day deadline to determine if Australian and British export controls are ‘comparable to those of the US’ expires on Saturday. (AP pic)

WASHINGTON: The US state department said on Friday that it expects to finalise trade exemptions for the Aukus defence project with Australia and the UK in the next 120 days, signalling a further delay but offering the prospect of a positive outcome in the project to counter China.

Aukus, formed in 2021 to address shared worries about China’s growing power, would involve Australia acquiring nuclear-powered attack submarines, among other items of defence cooperation. But the sharing of closely guarded technology is governed by strict US International Trafficking in Arms Regulations (ITAR).

The 2024 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) requires President Joe Biden to determine within 120 days of his signing it into law on Dec 22 whether Australia and the UK have export control regimes “comparable to the US” and thereby qualify for exemptions to the ITAR regulations. The 120 days is reached on Saturday.

“Exemptions in our export control systems, within a framework of shared standards with Australia and the UK, are key to harnessing and maximising the innovative power residing in our defense industrial bases,” the state department said.

“We fully expect to finalise the new trade exemptions – based on stakeholder input – over the course of the next 120 days,” it said.

Although the state department statement indicated a delay in a positive determination by Biden, the legislation requires him to revisit the issue in another 120 days.

The British government said in a statement it “warmly welcomes the significant progress” to advance AUKUS.

“UK and Australia are on track to meet the requirements of the NDAA and benefit from the exemptions,” it said. “We are confident that by the next 120-day period we will have completed all the requirements for full implementation of the ITAR exemptions.”

Australia’s department of defence said in a statement it welcomed the “tangible steps” by the US to streamline export control licensing requirements for Aukus.

“The decision by the United States Department of Commerce to establish a license‑free dual‑use export environment amongst and between Aukus partners is another significant step towards establishing a seamless environment for innovation, cooperation, and collaboration,” it said.

The Republican chair of the House foreign affairs committee, Michael McCaul, called the Biden administration’s failure to grant Australia and the UK ITAR exemptions by the initial deadline a “negative certification” and “very unfortunate.”

“While I was pleased to see the commerce department quickly release an interim rule that will scale back export controls, the state department continues to delay the necessary decision to deter and counter the threat posed by the Chinese Communist Party in the Indo-Pacific and beyond,” he said in a statement.

The White House did not respond to requests for comment about Biden’s decision.

On Thursday, the commerce department said it was scaling back its export-control requirements for Australia and the UK to foster cooperation under Aukus.

However, the department only handles licensing of some defence-related items, not the broader range of items covered by the ITAR regime, which is governed by the state department’s bureau of political-military affairs.

Jeff Bialos, a former senior defence department official now a partner with the Eversheds Sutherland law firm, said the state department has resisted blanket exemptions for the UK and Australia since they were first proposed by the Pentagon nearly 25 years ago, while he was in office.

However, he called the state department’s statement “forward leaning” and said he now expected the three countries to put forward draft exemptions covering each other’s export control rules.

“One of the criteria is that the other countries also have a system that will allow exports to the US to be exempt. It’s reciprocal,” he said.

Aukus’ first pillar deals with the supply of nuclear-powered submarines to Australia, while Pillar II calls for more immediate cooperation in high-tech defence items such as quantum computing, undersea capabilities, hypersonics, artificial intelligence, and cyber technology.

In announcing its move, the commerce department said both Australia and the UK “have robust export control systems and have taken additional steps in recent months to enhance technology protection.”

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