Blog Layout

The New U.S. Policy on UAS Exports: Responsibly Implementing the MTCR’s “Presumption of Denial”

Dr. Ford • Jul 25, 2020

Below is the text of the thirteenth paper in the ACIS Papers series produced by the Office of the Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security. This paper may also be found in PDF form at the bottom of this page.


The New U.S. Policy on UAS Exports: Responsibly Implementing the MTCR's "Presumption of Denial"

by

Dr. Christopher A. Ford

Arms Control and International Security Paper Series

Volume I, Number 13

July 24, 2020

In this ACIS Paper , Assistant Secretary Ford recounts the United States’ effort to reform the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) controls with respect to a subcategory of Unmanned Aerial Systems, and explains the new U.S. national approach to implementing the MTCR’s “strong presumption of denial” for proliferation-responsible transfers of “Category I” items under the MTCR Guidelines.

The Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) is an association of partner countries united by their subscription to a series of political commitments recognizing the importance of restraint in transfers of nuclear-capable ballistic missiles and cruise missiles, which are defined for MTCR purposes as systems that are capable of delivering at least a 500 kilogram payload to a range of at least 300 kilometers.  The discussions that led to the MTCR’s formation began in 1983, among France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the United States.  These five countries — joined by Canada and Japan — formally announced the creation of the MTCR in April 1987.  It now has 35 participating governments.

For most of its history, the MTCR has functioned quite well.  First, Partners who make up the MTCR have acted with much more restraint than would surely otherwise have been the case, while the MTCR has also has served as the  de facto missile nonproliferation standard globally and the example that even responsible governments  not in the Regime have looked to follow.  While there unfortunately  has been all too much missile proliferation in the world, the worst of it has been — and continues to be — from MTCR  non -partners, such as: North Korea, with its track record of selling missiles and related to technology to any country willing to pay for them; Chinese entities that continue to act as the major source of missile-related equipment to programs of proliferation concern in Iran, North Korea, Syria, and Pakistan; and Iran, with its egregious and ongoing transfers of missile technology to Lebanese Hizbollah terrorists and to Houthi militia groups in Yemen.  We continue to work with countries to call attention to the problem of missile proliferation and urge them to take steps to address it.  We do this bilaterally, through our participation in the MTCR, and through other appropriate international fora.  For example, last November the U.S. and Poland convened   a working group meeting of the Warsaw Process to draw attention to these problems and urge the international community to do more to keep such missile proliferation from further destabilizing the Middle East.

I.     The Challenge of Keeping the Regime Up to Date

As I  pointed out at an event at Hudson Institute in February 2019 , however, the 1980s-era technological benchmark built into the MTCR Guidelines — that is, the “500 kilograms to 300 kilometers” definition — has not fared well in recent years.  Dramatic advances in unmanned aerial systems (UAS) have led to a great explosion in the capabilities and beneficial uses of so-called “drone” aircraft that technically meet this definition, but which in no way present the kind of nuclear weapon delivery threat that the MTCR was established in order to help forestall.  As applied to many UAS, in other words, the MTCR is gravely out of date.

This mismatch presents a real challenge to the efficacy and the future of the MTCR regime, for the MTCR Guidelines call for partners to follow a “strong presumption of denial” for transfers of so-called “Category I” items — that is, such things as

complete rocket and unmanned aerial vehicle systems (including ballistic missiles, space launch vehicles, sounding rockets, cruise missiles, target drones, and reconnaissance drones), capable of delivering a payload of at least 500 kg to a range of at least 300 km, their major complete subsystems (such as rocket stages, engines, guidance sets, and re-entry vehicles), and related software and technology, as well as specially designed production facilities for these items.

With respect to  actual missiles and rockets, or the sort of high-performance cruise missile that would most likely be used deliver a nuclear weapon, this makes good sense.  For far less capable varieties of UAS, however, the presumption of denial has the effect of shutting MTCR partners out of an important, growing, and (in nuclear weapons terms) quite non-threatening UAS market, while leaving  non -partners free to sell whatever they wish to whomever they wish.

This is a net loss not just for the MTCR Partners themselves, but also for the cause of nonproliferation: in practice, the market for such non-threatening UAS is ceded to the  least proliferation-responsible international players.  No one intended the MTCR to be a marketing tool for missile brokers such as the PRC or Iran, but thanks to the MTCR’s rigidity as technology has advanced, there’s a real risk of that happening.

To be sure, this risk is to some extent inherent in the MTCR’s structure, since responsible MTCR participants both do and  should generally refuse to sell high-threat Category I systems, therefore necessarily leaving some potential market opportunities open for suppliers outside the MTCR.  For this to happen even with low-threat types of UAS that technically meet the Category I definition, however, seems needless and perverse.  As I summed it up in February 2019,

This situation harms not just the competitiveness of MTCR Partners, but also the MTCR itself — and the cause of nonproliferation. It puts needless pressure upon the MTCR and could threaten its long-term integrity, for institutions that do not know how to be appropriately flexible in a changing world risk shattering. Nor does continuing this rigidity stop the spread of UAS, because non-MTCR suppliers are stepping into this market.

“Indeed, the system’s current rigidity fails to provide real nonproliferation benefits either, because the growing sources of foreign supply for increasingly capable UAS mean that these systems are spreading anyway. And because non-MTCR suppliers of such equipment seldom feel the need to approach their transfer-related decision-making with the nonproliferation-focused scrupulousness that we and other MTCR Partners display, even for non-Category-I systems, allowing such non-MCTR suppliers to occupy this competitive terrain essentially uncontested means that nonproliferation equities will get less and less respect over time — unless, that is, we do something to fix this problem.

This challenge illustrates the ways in which, in an arena as characterized by the swift advance of technology as is the world of aerospace engineering and UAS applications, the passage of time can do damage to even the wisest set of standards if those rules are based upon fixed technological parameters.  (That is why, for instance, in our current work at the U.S. State Department to promote the development of norms of responsible behavior in cyberspace,  we have tried to make these standards as “technology-agnostic” as possible — such as by trying to define irresponsible cyber behavior by its  effects rather than based upon the use of any particular tool or method in the fast-developing environment of cyberspace.)  With respect to lower-threat UAS, the technological understandings of 1987 are now not only out of date, but also in real danger of becoming counterproductive.

II.     The U.S. MTCR Reform Proposal

For these reasons, the United States in March 2018 proposed an adjustment to the MTCR controls that would carve out a carefully selected subset of Category I UAS for treatment  as if they were Category II systems.  As first proposed, this subset was to be based upon a speed threshold, allowing more lenient treatment for those UAVs, other than cruise missiles, based on a representative maximum speed value of less than 800 kilometers per hour, [1] and with appropriate end-use statements and end-user assurances, including that these systems will not be used for the delivery of weapons of mass destruction. [2] In effect, this proposed MTCR reform would have updated the framework to “ allow more permissive treatment of run-of-the-mill, basically non-WMD-related modern UAS that are useful, and indeed in today’s world all but essential, for a range of non-WMD military and an exploding universe of peaceful civilian applications.”

Nothing we were proposing would have relaxed MTCR standards applying to high-threat systems such as cruise missiles, advanced unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs), or hypersonic aerial vehicles.  Our proposal included only the lower-threat systems — such as ordinary, slow, fixed-wing UAS, along with rotary wing systems and lighter-than-air craft — that would become subject to Category II treatment.  And even transfers of  these comparatively unproblematic systems would remain subject to careful nonproliferation considerations, pursuant to well-established MTCR principles.  Lower-threat systems would also be covered by the new standards of international conduct that we are currently negotiating in order to cover the  uses of UAS, especially armed UAS.

All in all, we judged that this proposal would protect what needed to be protected in the MTCR framework, while allowing a degree of relaxation for transfers of lower-threat systems in order to permit all of mankind better to take advantage of the myriad ways in which such systems are increasingly used for great benefit both in governmental applications and in the private sector.

In fact, by helping preserve or increase the market share and international engagements of MTCR partners who  do approach all such questions with real nonproliferation integrity — at the expense of unscrupulous suppliers who have hitherto been benefiting from overly rigid MTCR rules and unless the system is reformed will continue to do so — the more flexible approach we propose would likely have net nonproliferation  benefits rather than costs.”

We thought this reform proposal made eminent sense, and over more than two years we have worked diligently to build support for it among the 34 other MTCR Partners through a series of diplomatic engagements at various levels, from highly technical experts up to senior policy and political leaders.  These issues have been discussed and debated, for instance, at five MTCR Technical Experts Meetings, two meetings of the regime’s Reinforced Points of Contact forum, and two meetings of the full MTCR plenary, not to mention in innumerable bilateral engagements.  We have also repeatedly made technical changes and various other adjustments to our reform proposal in response to issues raised and ideas suggested by other MTCR partners.

Nevertheless, the MTCR is a consensus-based organization, in which even a single country — such as, for instance, a bellicose geopolitical revisionist — can hold up even the most sensible reform indefinitely.  We are pleased that many of our MTCR partners have supported our reform proposal, but it has become clear that thanks to foot-dragging by some, it is not yet possible to amend the MTCR controls by agreement.

This is certainly disappointing, because for all of the reasons outlined above, it would have been far better for the regime if the U.S. proposal had been adopted.  We will certainly keep trying, and perhaps indeed the last of our recalcitrant MTCR partners will in time come around.  Nevertheless, as then-NSC Senior Director Tim Morrison and I made quite clear at Hudson Institute in February 2019, as we have sought to update the MTCR and keep it relevant and effective in an age of rapidly advancing technology, the United States’ patience was not going to be unlimited.

To repeat, the United States still hopes to gain support for the proposed MTCR reform.  In the interim, however, we are not willing to sit on our hands as the technological mismatch between MTCR standards and the modern era of UAS technology erodes the effectiveness of the regime, works against the interests of the MTCR partners, and impedes progress in the world’s ability to take advantage of low-WMD-threat UAS for a wide range of commercial and governmental purposes.

III.     The New U.S. National Policy

Accordingly, the United States is now implementing a new  national policy on the export of Category I unmanned aerial systems.  This policy does not derogate from MCTR principles; it is, in fact, entirely consistent both with the letter and with the spirit of the MTCR Guidelines.  We are taking this step  within the MTCR framework and in accordance with its principles, for it is an extremely valuable regime in which we continue to be a participant and of which we remain a very strong supporter.  What we are doing is merely to build out a balanced and nuanced national policy  within the MTCR framework that will — at least with regard to U.S.  exports , anyway — help address the problems of regime implementation that have become so clear in recent years.

A.     Implementing the Presumption of Denial

The key to understanding this new U.S. policy is to remember how the MTCR operates.  As noted earlier, the Guidelines specify that for Category I items, “ there will be a strong presumption to deny such transfers.”  The critical point here, however, is that this is  not a prohibition upon all such transfers: there is merely a  presumption that Category I items will not be exported.  (The closest the MTCR comes to an actual prohibition is with regard to the transfer of production facilities. “Until further notice,” the Guidelines provide, “the transfer of Category I production facilities will not be authorised.”)  All transfers are to be assessed on a case-by-case basis, and — with it being “understood that the decision to transfer remains the sole and sovereign judgement of the Government” — while all MTCR partners are expected generally to refrain from Category I exports, it has always been permissible to make a Category I transfer  when there is a compelling reason to overcome the presumption of denial and such a step is well justified in terms of the nonproliferation factors specified in the MTCR Guidelines.

There is nothing novel or shocking about operating on the basis of rebuttable presumptions.  In implementing U.S. national security export controls, for instance, we use “presumptions of denial” quite frequently.  For instance, after we placed the PRC telecommunications company Huawei on the U.S. Commerce Department’s Entity List and adopted  changes to the Foreign Direct Product Rule with regard to the use of U.S.-origin semiconductor design tools to produce chips for that company, we also adopted a “presumption of denial” policy for many types of transfer to Huawei.

In the modern world, the most famous presumption of all may be the fabled “presumption of innocence” in criminal law — that is, the principle that one should be presumed innocent of wrongdoing until actually proven guilty.  This maxim was apparently first articulated in U.S. Supreme Court case law with the 1895 case  Coffin v. United States (156 U.S. 432), but it seems to  find its earliest expression in the writing of the medieval French scholar and cleric Johannes Monachus , who when analyzing an ecclesiastical pronouncement of Pope Boniface VIII formulated the maxim in Latin:  item quilibet presumitur innocens nisi probetur nocens.  Most people have probably never heard of Monachus, but they know this principle well.

As the example of the “presumption of innocence” makes clear, however, the central feature of any such presumption is that it can be overcome.  (If not, it wouldn’t be a presumption at all, but rather just an ordinary rule.)  “Rebuttability,” if you will, is therefore inherent in the concept of a presumption, and is quite essential to it.  There would be no criminal justice system at all, for example, if the presumption of innocence could not be overcome by appropriate evidence, and it is a central purpose of criminal procedure to provide a fair, effective, and accountable system for determining when that can be deemed to have occurred.

Strangely, however, given the role of the “strong presumption of denial” as the touchstone for MTCR policy vis-à-vis Category I transfers, participants in the Regime have not been very forthcoming about cases, if any, in which they regard the presumption as having been rebutted.  A general reluctance to rebut the presumption is certainly understandable in light of the Regime’s central focus on preventing or impeding missile proliferation and thereby preventing the spread of WMD, but in practice it would appear that most observers and participants have just assumed that the “strong presumption of denial” is not actually a presumption at all, but rather a simple prohibition.  Yet that assumption is a category mistake: a confusion which flies in the face of the clear text and structure of the Guidelines.

The new United States policy on Category I UAS exports thus attempts to set forth a careful and balanced approach,  within the MTCR Guidelines , that for the first time offers a clear explication of certain circumstances in which the “strong presumption of denial” can be overcome.

B.     The New Approach

Under this new approach, the United States has determined that the “strong presumption of denial” for MTCR Category I UAS transfers will be overcome for a subset of unmanned aerial systems with a maximum airspeed of less than 800 kilometers per hour. [3] This new policy will change nothing with regard to how we handle UAS that present higher risk for WMD delivery — such as cruise missiles, hypersonic aerial vehicles, and advanced UCAVs — which will continue to be treated pursuant to traditional “strong presumption of denial” approaches under which they are effectively non-exportable except on rare occasions.  Our new approach will merely mean that we will approach lower-threat, low-speed UAS somewhat more flexibly, and treat them as Category II systems.  Nor will this mean that transfers of these systems will be subject to a strong presumption of  approval ; proposals will be evaluated on their individual merits.

So let me stress what will not change.  All transfers will continue to be subject to careful case-by-case consideration prior to transfer, which will include an assessment of the risk of controlled items falling into the hands of unauthorized end-users, irresponsible actors, state adversaries, and terrorists.  We will also continue to demand appropriate end-use and end-user certifications, as well as end-use monitoring wherever appropriate, and we will evaluate all transfers against the MTCR Guidelines.  All military UAS transfers will continue to be subject to a State Department-led assessment under the U.S. Conventional Arms Transfer (CAT) Policy, as well as to a Defense Department-led assessment regarding technology security, as applicable.  And all civil UAS exports will continue to be subject to the licensing requirements and policies of the Export Administration Regulations, which includes an interagency review.

As before, we will also continue to assess the impact of a proposed transfer in terms of the recipient’s existing capabilities, including its pursuit of WMD or missile and space programs that could contribute to WMD delivery systems; if a system is judged likely to be intended for WMD delivery, the transfer will, of course, be denied.  We will also continue to require as a condition of transfer that the recipient not arm an unarmed UAS with a foreign  or a U.S. weapon without express prior U.S. Government authorization.  Additionally, consistent with the MTCR Guidelines, we will continue to deny transfers of production facilities and technology for the development or production of complete MTCR Category I UAS.

Consistent with the MTCR Guidelines and  the standards they recommend for evaluating proposed transfers , the United States will continue to approach each transfer — including for UAS with maximum speeds of at least 800 km/h that are MTCR Category I systems and not eligible for Category II-type treatment — as a whole-of-government decision that takes into account all relevant factors and policies, including U.S. national security, nonproliferation, and foreign policy objectives, as well as the recipient country’s capability and willingness effectively and responsibly to use and safeguard U.S.-origin technology.

Nothing about this decision will result in any derogation from existing high U.S. standards for thinking about Category I transfers.  Where an end-use country maintains strong export controls and nonproliferation practices consistent with MTCR standards, for example — and where it is a member in good standing of major nonproliferation treaties and export control regimes, or unilaterally adheres to the MTCR and other standards of best practice — that country will tend to rate higher in our evaluation process.

Similarly, countries that demonstrate serious and effective nonproliferation practices, including refraining from or stopping transactions of proliferation concern, complying with proliferation-related U.N. Security Council sanctions, and not engaging in trade with entities sanctioned under U.S. laws, will also generally rate more highly.  It will also be a positive factor where a country is a mutual defense treaty ally, participates with the United States in coalition operations, or has a positive track record of responsibly using U.S.-provided defense articles in accordance with the conditions of their sale.

The United States will continue to abide by its MTCR commitments, including those related to pre-notifying MTCR Category I transfers.  We will also continue to lead in the development of responsible standards of behavior in UAS export and use, such as by pressing more countries to join the “Joint Declaration for the Export and Subsequent Use of Armed or Strike-Enabled [Unmanned Aerial Vehicles]” and to commit to further developing international standards for the export and subsequent use of armed UAS.

This new U.S. approach is thus a national policy entirely consistent with the MTCR, a regime that we continue strongly to support.  As I put it in February 2019,

We have been steadfast proponents of the MTCR from its beginning, and holding ourselves and international partners to its standards of nonproliferation ‘best practice’ is an important and enduring aspect of our approach to nonproliferation and the preservation of international peace and security against the destabilizing spread of systems capable of delivering weapons of mass destruction. We remain steadfast in our commitment to the MTCR.”

We are proud of our new approach, and the fidelity to the MTCR that it represents, even as we adjust responsibly to technological change.  As we move to protect and advance U.S. interests and allow more recipients to take advantage of the expanding range of proliferation-responsible UAS applications that are becoming available, therefore, we look forward to continuing to serve as a model of MTCR implementation and transparency.
-- Christopher Ford

[1] For these purposes, maximum airspeed would have been defined as the vehicle true velocity under zero wind conditions relative to the direction of flight as determined using ICAO standard atmosphere as corresponds to the never-exceed speed or maximum operating limit speed (for turbine engine-powered UAV systems) or never-exceed speed consistent with airworthiness standards, such as NATO STANAG 4671, or for equivalent manned aircraft, such as FAR Part 23.  This approach for determining the maximum airspeed values aimed to take advantage of existing UAV/aircraft airworthiness standards to provide specificity to exporters and licensing officials.

[2] Subsequent negotiations with MTCR partners led to a modification of the original U.S. proposal, such as by changing the speed threshold to 700 km/h and exempting UAS specially designed for stealthy applications.

[3] This value of 800 km/h covers a wide range of UAS systems for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) missions, or to support counterterrorism or border security.  This speed value also excludes hypersonic aerial vehicles and most UCAVs, and is also below the speeds of known cruise missiles.  The 700 km/h maximum speed limit value in our current revised proposal for reforming the MCTR Guidelines was proposed as a compromise to provide an additional gap between the maximum speed level for Category II treatment of UAVs and the speeds of known cruise missiles.  Since the new U.S. UAS Export Policy does not apply to cruise missiles, however, such an additional gap in maximum speed is not required — and hence our national policy will use the 800 km/h standard.

Download ACIS Paper 13
By Dr. Christopher Ford 29 Mar, 2024
Below appears the text upon which Dr. Ford based his remarks to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) Project on Nuclear Issues (PONI) “PONI Scholars” group on March 28, 2024. 
By Dr. Christopher Ford 28 Feb, 2024
Dr. Ford's paper "Nuclear Posture and Nuclear Posturing: A Conceptual Framework for Analyzing China's Nuclear Weapons Policy" was published in February 2024 by the National Institute for Public Policy . You can read the paper on NIPP's website here , or use the button below to download a PDF.
By Dr. Christopher Ford 14 Feb, 2024
Below is the text of Dr. Ford's comments at an event the American Enterprise Institute on February 13, 2024, on U.S. outbound investment screening.
By Dr. Christopher Ford 11 Feb, 2024
 Below are the remarks Dr. Ford delivered at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs on February 8, 2024.
By Dr. Christopher Ford 24 Jan, 2024
For a roundtable on December 13, 2023, sponsored by the Society for Risk Analysis and the Stimson Center , Dr. Ford participated in a discussion with Stimson's Debra Decker about nuclear risk reduction and the challenges of leadership in a complex national security environment. You can find materials on the roundtable here , and a video of Dr. Ford's discussion with Ms. Decker here .
By Dr. Christopher Ford 14 Jan, 2024
Below is the prepared text upon which Dr. Ford drew in making brief remarks at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace’s “Targeting Workshop” on January 12, 2024.
By Dr. Christopher Ford 08 Jan, 2024
With 2023 now in our collective rear-view mirror, I thought I’d offer you a handy compilation of my public work product from the last year. The list is heavy on strategic competition with China, of course, but doesn’t omit other topics ( e.g., morality and nuclear weapons policy, nuclear nonproliferation, and North Korea).  Keep checking New Paradigms Forum for new material as we move into 2024!
By Dr. Christopher Ford 07 Dec, 2023
Below are the remarks delivered by Dr. Ford at the “Strategic C ompetition Educators Conference” held on December 7, 2023, at the U.S. Foreign Service Institut e in Arlington, Virginia.
By Dr. Christopher Ford 06 Dec, 2023
Below are the remarks Dr. Ford delivered at a conference sponsored by the  Center for Global Security Research (CGSR) at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), on December 5, 2023.
By Dr. Christopher Ford 07 Oct, 2023
Below are the remarks Dr. Ford delivered at Bacon House in Washington, D.C., on October 6, 2023, to DACOR ’s annal conference. This text has been supplemented with amplifying references to the original (longer) text Dr. Ford prepared for the event.
More Posts
Share by: