Exclusive: Trump administration prepares to ease export
rules for U.S. guns
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[September 20, 2017]
By Mike Stone and Matt Spetalnick
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration is preparing to make it easier for American gun makers to
sell small arms, including assault rifles and ammunition, to foreign
buyers, according to senior U.S. officials.
Aides to President Donald Trump are completing a plan to shift oversight
of international non-military firearms sales from the State Department
to the Commerce Department, four officials told Reuters.
While the State Department is primarily concerned about international
threats to stability and maintains tight restrictions on weapons deals,
the Commerce Department typically focuses more on facilitating trade.
The officials from multiple agencies, speaking on condition of
anonymity, say the new rules will cut government red tape and regulatory
costs, boosting U.S. exports of small arms and creating jobs at home.
"There will be more leeway to do arms sales," one senior administration
official said. "You could really turn the spigot on if you do it the
right way."
The push fits both Trump's support for the gun lobby espoused on the
campaign trail and his "Buy American" agenda.
But critics, including some lawmakers and arms control advocates, have
expressed concern that any easing of export rules could make powerful
weapons of the type often used in U.S. mass shootings more accessible to
criminal gangs and militant groups that Trump has vowed to fight.
The administration has all but finalized a draft of the new rules, which
could be sent to the White House budget office for review within days,
one U.S. official said.
The changes – which can be enacted without congressional approval -
could be made public this fall, followed by a period of public comment,
with implementation as early as the first half of next year, the
officials said.
The officials stressed, however, that the proposed shift in oversight
was not a blanket deregulation of firearms.
"The NSC is working through the interagency process with the State
Department and the Department of Commerce to ensure that U.S. industries
have every advantage in the global marketplace, while at the same time
ensuring the responsible export of arms," said an official with the
White House National Security Council.
SLACK U.S. SALES
The move, part of a broader Trump administration overhaul of weapons
export policy that the officials say is also nearing completion, comes
at a time when U.S. gun makers could use the help.
Domestic gun sales have fallen significantly after soaring under
President Barack Obama, when gun enthusiasts stockpiled weapons and
ammunition out of fear that the government would tighten gun laws.
Since Trump was elected in November, the share price for Smith & Wesson
owner American Outdoor Brands Corp <AOBC.O> is down 50 percent and Sturm
Ruger <RGR.N> has fallen 26 percent.
On Tuesday, following Reuters report on the administration's plans, the
share prices of Sturm Ruger and American Outdoor surged as much as 18
percent.
Both stand to benefit from easier export protocols, alongside Vista
Outdoor <VSTO.N> and the private equity firm Cerberus Capital
Management, which owns Bushmaster, a brand of AR-15 assault rifle.
The powerful U.S. gun lobby backed Trump in the 2016 election. The
National Rifle Association spent more than $30 million in support of his
candidacy. "I am going to come through for you," Trump told the NRA
convention in April.
The State Department licensed an estimated $4 billion in commercial
firearms exports last year, of which $3.2 billion would shift to
Commerce under the new arrangement, one U.S. official said.
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A new Ruger AR-15 rifle is seen for sale at the Pony Express
Firearms shop in Parker, Colorado December 7, 2015. REUTERS/Rick
Wilking/File Photo
In recent years, Canada, Australia, Thailand and Saudi Arabia have been
among the top destination countries for U.S. non-military firearms
exports, according to U.S. Census data.
The shift to Commerce could increase sales by 15-20 percent annually,
predicted Lawrence Keane, senior vice president for the National
Shooting Sports Foundation, a firearms industry trade association.
The effort to streamline U.S. small arms export controls dates back to
an Obama administration initiative begun in 2009, but which was never
translated into policy.
The process was repeatedly stalled by a series of U.S. mass shootings,
including one at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown,
Connecticut, in 2012 in which 20 children and six adults were killed by
a gunman using an AR-15-style assault rifle.
Assault rifles like the Bushmaster would be some of the most powerful
weapons expected to be more readily available for commercial export
under the new rules, which are largely in line with proposals the Obama
administration had crafted.
STRESS TEST
Democratic Senators Ben Cardin, Dianne Feinstein and Patrick Leahy urged
against any rash regulatory changes in a letter to Secretary of State
Rex Tillerson on Friday, saying combat firearms are the "primary means
of injury and destruction in civil and military conflicts throughout the
world."
Zlatko Hadzismajlovic, a New York attorney specializing in export
controls, said the changes would be a tough "stress test" for U.S. arms
policy.
"The transition appears particularly ill-timed," he said, citing recent
Islamist militant attacks in Europe and heightened regional tensions on
the borders of NATO members such as Turkey and the Baltic states.
Administration officials say they are not looking to green-light
dangerous sales but that it is unrealistic to continue to hamstring U.S.
gun makers in foreign markets.
They point out, for instance, that AR-15 rifles are already readily
available worldwide since the technology is decades old, the weapons are
sold in U.S. sporting goods stores and parts can be reproduced using a
3D printer.
The new rules would move both the licensing and supervision for export
of most non-military firearms and ammunition to Commerce officials, who
have been directed by Trump to ease the overall regulatory burden on
U.S. exporters.
Commercial gun exports would no longer be given the same scrutiny as
missile and fighter jet sales, which often require congressional
approval.
"Commerce wants more exports to help reduce the trade deficit. And State
wants to stop things because it sees (arms) proliferation as inherently
bad," one of the officials said.
"We want to make a decision that prioritizes what's more important," the
official said. "This will allow us to get in the (small arms sales) game
for the first time ever."
The shift would officially move weapons like assault rifles and handguns
from State's tightly restricted Munitions List to the Commerce Control
List (CCL), which allows for more streamlined licensing for overseas
sales.
U.S. companies compete for foreign market share with companies such as
Austrian manufacturer Glock and Italian gun maker Beretta.
(Reporting by Mike Stone and Matt Spetalnick, additional reporting by
Peter Eisler, Grant Smith and David Brunnstrom; Editing by Chris Sanders
and Tomasz Janowski)
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