US Imposes New Export Rules to China

Reuters
By Reuters
April 28, 2020Business News
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US Imposes New Export Rules to China
An American flag flies with shipping containers stacked at the Port of Los Angeles in the background, which is the nation's busiest container port in California, on Nov. 7, 2019. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

The United States said on April 28 it will impose new restrictions on exports to China to keep semiconductor production equipment and other technology away from Beijing’s military.

The new rules will require licenses for U.S. companies to sell certain items to companies in China that support the military, even if the products are for civilian use. They also do away with a civilian exception that allows certain U.S. technology to be exported without a license.

They come as relations between the United States and China have deteriorated amid the new CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus outbreak.

The rules, which were posted for public inspection and will be published in the Federal Register on Tuesday, could hurt the semiconductor industry and sales of civil aviation parts and components to China.

Police on street in Beijing
Chinese military wear protective masks as they march in the street in Beijing, China, on April 22, 2020. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)

The changes, which also expand the universe of items requiring licenses, affect Russia and Venezuela, too, but the biggest impact will be on trade with China.

“It is important to consider the ramifications of doing business with countries that have histories of diverting goods purchased from U.S. companies for military applications,” Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a statement.

Washington trade lawyer Kevin Wolf said the rule changes for China are in response to its policy of military-civil fusion: finding military applications for civilian items.

He said the regulatory definitions of military use and user are broad and go beyond purchases by entities such as the People’s Liberation Army.

For example, Wolf said, if a car company in China repairs a military vehicle, that car company may now be a military end-user, even if the item being exported is for another part of the business.

China military trucks
Chinese military vehicles carrying DF-41 ballistic missiles roll during a parade to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the founding of Communist China in Beijing on Oct. 1, 2019. (Mark Schiefelbein/AP Photo)

“A military end-user is not limited to military organizations,” Wolf said. “A military end-user is also a civilian company whose actions are intended to support the operation of a military item.”

The rule change also requires that U.S. companies file declarations for all exports to China, Russia, and Venezuela regardless of value.

“Obviously this is intended to give the U.S. government more visibility into the types of goods U.S. exporters send to these countries and their customers,” said Washington trade lawyer Doug Jacobson.

Another rule change involves eliminating civilian license exceptions for Chinese importers and Chinese nationals, as well as other countries, including Ukraine and Russia. The exceptions have applied to certain integrated circuits, telecommunications equipment, radar, high-end computers, and other items.

The administration also posted a third proposed rule change that would force foreign companies shipping certain American goods to China to seek approval not only from their own governments but from the United States as well.

The Commerce Department does not know the economic impact of imposing the re-export license, and will allow a comment period to gather information on the proposed change, a representative said.

Republican Senator Ben Sasse supported the new rules, saying Chinese leader Xi Jinping “has erased any daylight between China’s businesses and the Communist Party’s military.”

The tightened restrictions have been in the works since at least last year, but senior U.S. officials agreed to move ahead with them in late March, as Reuters reported earlier this month.

John Neuffer, president and chief executive of the Semiconductor Industry Association, said the industry was concerned the broad rules will “unnecessarily expand export controls for semiconductors and create further uncertainty for our industry during this time of unprecedented global economic turmoil.”

By Karen Freifeld

Epoch Times staff contributed to this report.

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