WASHINGTON, July 25 (NNN-Xinhua) — The US government on Friday announced updated export restrictions on unmanned aerial systems (UAS), a move long sought by the country’s defense industries.
“The President has decided to invoke our national discretion to treat a carefully selected subset of MTCR Category I UAS, which cannot travel faster than 800 kilometers per hour, as Category II,” said the White House in a statement.
The standards of the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) have been outdated, which not only hurt the U.S. industry but also undermined the country’s deterrence capability abroad by constraining U.S. allies and partners, the statement said.
This policy change means that the UAS with speed under 800 km per hour will no longer be subjected to the “strong presumption of denial” of the MTCR, allowing the United States to increase foreign sales of military drones such as MQ-9 Reaper and the RQ-4 Global Hawk.
“It helps our allies, it helps our partners — it helps them all meet their urgent national security and commercial requirements, and it also advances the United States’s national security and economic interests,” R. Clarke Cooper, assistant secretary of state for political-military affairs, told reporters in a Friday phone briefing.
U.S. media reported that US defense industries have been pushing for export changes for years so that they can sell more drones overseas, especially to the Middle East.
The MTCR, established in 1987, is an informal political agreement between 35 member states that aims to limit the proliferation of missiles and missile technology. — NNN-XINHUA