Exclusive: Trump to call on Pentagon,
diplomats to play bigger role on arms sales
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[January 08, 2018]
By Mike Stone and Matt Spetalnick
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration is nearing completion of a new "Buy American" plan that
calls for U.S. military attaches and diplomats to help drum up billions
of dollars more in business overseas for the American weapons industry,
going beyond the assistance they currently provide, U.S. officials said.
President Donald Trump as early as February is expected to announce a
"whole of government" effort to ease export rules on purchases by
foreign countries of U.S.-made military equipment, from fighter jets and
drones to warships and artillery, according to people familiar with the
plan.
Trump is seeking to fulfill a 2016 election campaign promise to create
jobs in the United States by selling more goods and services abroad to
bring down the U.S. trade deficit from a six-year high of $50 billion.
The administration is also under pressure from U.S. defense contractors
facing growing competition from foreign rivals such as China and Russia.
But any loosening of the restrictions on weapons sales would be in
defiance of human rights and arms control advocates who said there was
too great a risk of fueling violence in regions such as the Middle East
and South Asia or arms being diverted to be used in terrorist attacks.
Besides greater use of a network of military and commercial attaches
already stationed at U.S. embassies in foreign capitals, senior
officials who spoke on condition of anonymity said another thrust of the
plan will be to set in motion a realignment of the International
Trafficking in Arms Regulations (ITAR). It is a central policy governing
arms exports since 1976 and has not been fully revamped in more than
three decades.
This expanded government effort on behalf of American arms makers,
together with looser restrictions on weapons exports and more favorable
treatment of sales to non-NATO allies and partners, could bring
additional billions of dollars in deals and more jobs, a senior U.S.
official said, without providing specifics.
The strategy of having the Pentagon and the U.S. State Department take a
more active role in securing foreign arms deals could especially benefit
major defense contractors such as Lockheed Martin and Boeing Co.
"We want to see those guys, the commercial and military attaches,
unfettered to be salesmen for this stuff, to be promoters," said the
senior administration official, who is close to the internal
deliberations and spoke on condition of anonymity.
A State Department official, asked to confirm details of the coming new
policy, said the revamped approach "gives our partners a greater
capacity to help share the burden of international security, benefits
the defense industrial base and will provide more good jobs for American
workers."
The White House and Pentagon declined official comment.
Defense industry officials and lobbyists have privately welcomed what
they expect will be a more sales-friendly approach.
It is unclear how deeply the diplomats and military officers overseas
will delve into dealmaking and what guidelines will be established, said
officials in the administration.
Trump, a Republican, has the legal authority to direct government
embassy "security assistance officers," both military personnel and
civilians, to do more to help drive arms sales.
Administration officials see this group, which already has duties such
as managing military aid overseas and providing information to foreign
governments for buying U.S. arms, as underutilized by previous
presidents.
'BACK SEAT' FOR HUMAN RIGHTS?
One national security analyst said that easing export restrictions to
allow defense contractors to reap greater profits internationally would
increase the danger of top-of-the-line U.S. weapons going to governments
with poor human rights records or being used by militants.
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President Donald Trump speaks to the media after the Congressional
Republican Leadership retreat at Camp David, Maryland, U.S., January
6, 2018. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
"This administration has demonstrated from the very beginning that
human rights have taken a back seat to economic concerns," said
Rachel Stohl, director of the conventional defense program at the
Stimson Center in Washington. "And the short-sightedness of a new
arms export policy could have serious long-term implications."
The administration officials said human rights considerations would
remain part of the formula for arms sales decisions. But they said
such reviews would now afford greater weight than before to whether
a deal would be good for the U.S. economy and strengthen America's
defense industrial base, in which case red tape would be cut
accordingly.
Rules to make it easier to sell U.S.-made military drones overseas
and compete against fast-growing Chinese and Israeli rivals are also
expected to be in the Trump plan, officials said.
Trump's Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama, also sought to make it
easier to sell to America's most trusted allies but in a more
cautious approach that his administration billed as a way to boost
American business while keeping strict controls against more
dangerous arms proliferation. Foreign weapons sales soared during
his tenure, with the United States retaining its position as the
world's top arms supplier.
Shares of the five biggest U.S. defense contractors, including
Lockheed, Boeing, Raytheon Co, General Dynamics Corp and Northrop
Grumman have more than tripled over the last five years and
currently trade at or near all-time highs.
Foreign military sales in fiscal 2017, comprising much of Trump's
first year in office and the final months of Obama's term, climbed
to $42 billion, compared to $31 billion in the prior year, according
to the U.S. Defense Security Cooperation Agency.
The Trump administration has already moved forward on several
controversial sales. Those include a push for $7 billion in
precision-guided munitions to Saudi Arabia despite concerns they
have contributed to civilian deaths in the Saudi campaign in Yemen's
civil war and the unblocking of $3 billion in arms to Bahrain, which
was also held up by human rights concerns under Obama.
Similar concerns have been raised over the administration's
preparations to make it easier for American gun makers to sell small
arms, including assault rifles and ammunition, to foreign buyers.
A draft of the new policy proposals recently finished by
inter-agency teams coordinated by Trump's National Security Council
must now be approved by a select group of senior cabinet members
before being sent to his desk, the government sources said.
Once Trump announces an extensive framework of the plan, there will
be a 60-day public comment period. After that, the administration is
expected to unveil further details. Some of the changes are expected
to take the form of what is formally known as a presidential
"National Security Decision Directive," two of the sources said.
(Reporting by Mike Stone and Matt Spetalnick in Washington; Editing
by Chris Sanders and Grant McCool)
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