Committee Documents Online 107th Congress
Summary: The Export Administration Act of
2001
September 6, 2001
I. GENERAL AUTHORITY & ADVISORY COMMITTEES
- Establishes an export control list for sensitive U.S. technologies
- Authorizes the President to establish President's Technology Export
Council, as well as Export Control Advisory Committees
II. NATIONAL SECURITY CONTROLS
- Establishes National Security Control List for items that contribute to
military potential of other countries, or to stem weapons proliferation or
deter terrorism
- Ensures strong role for national security interests by requiring
concurrence of Secretary of Defense for items included on the List
- Establishes a country tiering system under which countries are assigned to
one of a range of tiers for each controlled item or group of items
- Authorizes national security controls, based on the end use or end user,
on any item that could materially contribute to the proliferation of weapons
of mass destruction
- Provides for enhanced controls on items, regardless of status, if
President finds that removing controls would pose a significant threat to U.S.
national security
- Removes unnecessary barriers to trade by removing ineffective controls on
items with foreign availability or mass-market status, but allows President to
reimpose controls to advance U.S. national security
- Creates an Office of Technology Evaluation of experts to gather,
coordinate, and analyze information on foreign availability and mass market
status
III. FOREIGN POLICY CONTROLS
- Authorizes foreign policy controls on items to promote U.S. objectives,
promote international peace, stability, and human rights, and deter and punish
acts of terrorism
- Requires that foreign policy controls meet certain criteria designed to
target and ensure success of controls, and sunsets controls after 2 years
unless specifically renewed
- Encourages diplomatic resolution by directing President to negotiate with
targeted country
IV. EXPORT LICENSING & DISPUTE RESOLUTION PROCEDURES
- Enhances and codifies the role of Department of Defense and other agencies
in critical identification and licensing processes
- Provides greater transparency and predictability for exporters by
streamlining and updating licensing procedures
V. INTERNATIONAL ARRANGEMENTS, PENALTIES, &
ENFORCEMENT
- Encourages U.S. participation in new and existing multilateral export
control regimes
- Establishes tough new criminal and civil penalties for export control
violations
- Targets end-use checks on those exports that pose greatest risk to
national security, and provides strict penalties against end-users who refuse
to allow verification
- Authorizes funding for the Bureau of Export Administration of the
Department of Commerce, with significant additional resources for enforcement
programs
- Terminates the Act's authority unless the President provides Congress a
report on export controls and either proposes legislative reforms or certifies
that no reforms are necessary