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		Exclusive: Biden wants to keep Trump policy that boosted armed drone 
		exports - sources
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		 [March 25, 2021] 
		By Mike Stone 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Biden 
		administration wants to keep a controversial Trump policy that 
		jump-started sales of armed drones to countries whose human rights 
		records are under scrutiny in the United States and elsewhere, according 
		to sources familiar with the discussions.
 
 When former President Donald Trump's administration reinterpreted the 
		Cold War-era arms agreement between 35 nations known as the Missile 
		Technology Control Regime (MTCR) to increase drone sales, arms control 
		advocates and some top Democratic lawmakers feared it would worsen 
		global conflicts.
 
 While it's too early to tell if that is the case, sales have risen.
 
 Keeping the policy could also be at odds with President Joe Biden's 
		campaign pledge to "make sure America does not check its values at the 
		door to sell arms". When Biden was vice president under President Barack 
		Obama, human rights groups criticized their administration for armed 
		drone attacks on Taliban militants in Afghanistan that also killed 
		civilians.
 
		 
		
 From 2018 to 2020 Washington had been renegotiating the 33-year old MTCR 
		to lift agreed-upon limits on the proliferation of drone technology. But 
		last year Trump shelved an effort to rewrite the pact and decided to 
		offer U.S. drones to nearly any country that wanted to buy them.
 
 Biden wants to renew those talks, the sources said.
 
 While stealthy jets such as the $79 million F-35 grab headlines, drones 
		are far less expensive but can still execute high-risk missile strikes 
		and surveillance missions without endangering a pilot. Many of the 
		U.S.-made aerial vehicles fly fast and carry big payloads, making them 
		highly sought after while strengthening a country's ties with the U.S. 
		military.
 
 The White House National Security Council (NSC) is studying how to keep 
		the policy in place while the Department of State is asking allies and 
		other countries that sell drones to adopt the U.S. position, people 
		familiar with the matter said.
 
 Though no decision has been passed up to the undersecretary cabinet 
		level, people briefed on internal administration talks said it was 
		leaning towards keeping Trump's more expansive export policy.
 
 "They are not going to walk it back," one of the people said of the 
		policy that Trump had hoped would take market share from Chinese-made 
		drones.
 
 An official at the NSC said, "the U.S. government will continue to 
		invoke its national discretion" and treat large drones as though they 
		fall outside the purview of the MTCR, which was written to control the 
		proliferation of cruise missiles.
 
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			A U.S. Air Force MQ-9 Reaper drone sits in a hanger at Amari Air 
			Base, Estonia, July 1, 2020. U.S. unmanned aircraft are deployed in 
			Estonia to support NATO's intelligence gathering missions in the 
			Baltics. REUTERS/Janis Laizans/ 
            
			 
            HOLDING DOOR OPEN
 Keeping the policy holds the door open for hundreds of millions and 
			eventually billions of dollars in U.S. sales to governments in 
			Taiwan, India, Morocco, and the United Arab Emirates that in the 
			past have been prohibited from buying them.
 
 Human rights activists and arms control advocates are not the only 
			skeptical voices about the Trump policy.
 
 Members of Congress are holding up the sale of four drones to 
			Morocco , reported by Reuters in December, over objections to the 
			Trump administration's move to recognize Western Sahara as Moroccan 
			territory, people familiar with the deal told Reuters.
 
 The NSC official said the decision to continue with the Trump policy 
			"provides the U.S. government the flexibility to review UAS 
			(unmanned aerial systems) export requests" while continuing to 
			exercise that "national discretion in ways consistent with our MTCR 
			commitments, as well as "our strong commitment to U.S. national 
			security, human rights, nonproliferation, and other foreign policy 
			objectives."
 
 The MTCR classifies several of the most powerful U.S. drones as 
			cruise missiles because they meet the technical specifications for 
			unpiloted aircraft in the pact.
 
 Under Trump's reinterpretation, the United States decided to treat 
			large strike-capable drones that cannot travel faster than 800 
			kilometers per hour as though they belonged in a classification that 
			fell outside the pact's jurisdiction.
 
 This allowed for easier export of Global Hawks, made by Northrop 
			Grumman, which are not armed and used for surveillance, as well as 
			Reapers used for both surveillance and air strikes and made by 
			General Atomics.
 
            
			 
			Longer term, the Biden team wants to negotiate a whole new agreement 
			just for drone exports, according to a source familiar with the 
			situation and the NSC official.
 The NSC official said the Biden team will "work with other countries 
			to shape international standards for the sale, transfer, and 
			subsequent use of armed UAS."
 
 (Reporting by Mike Stone in Washington; Editing by Chris Sanders and 
			Grant McCool)
 
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