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 Boeing gets security restrictions lifted for profits
 

It appears that profits for some is more important than national security and the welfare of the American taxpayers, and the future of our economy and children. It also appears that the Boeing Company's lobbying and influence efforts have reached beyond the upper levels of the Pentagon into the highest levels of the Executive Branch. VM
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From our friends at Truthout:

Doubts Raised on Technology Sales to China
By Steven R. Weisman
The New York Times

Wednesday 02 January 2008

Washington - Six months ago, the Bush administration quietly eased some restrictions on the export of sensitive technologies to China. The new approach was intended to help American companies increase sales of high-tech equipment to China despite tight curbs on sharing technology that might have military applications.

But today the administration is facing questions from weapons experts about whether some equipment - newly authorized for export to Chinese companies deemed trustworthy by Washington - could instead end up helping China modernize its military. Equally worrisome, the weapons experts say, is the possibility that China could share the technology with Iran or Syria.

The technologies include advanced aircraft engine parts, navigation systems, telecommunications equipment and sophisticated composite materials.

The questions raised about the new policy are in a report to be released this week by the Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control, an independent research foundation that opposes the spread of arms technologies.

The administration's new approach is part of an overall drive to require licenses for the export of an expanded list of technologies in aircraft engines, lasers, telecommunications, aircraft materials and other fields of interest to China's military.

But while imposing license requirements for the transfer of these technologies, the administration is also validating certain Chinese companies that may import these technologies without licenses.

Five such companies were designated in October, but as many as a dozen others are in the pipeline for possible future designation.

Mario Mancuso, Under Secretary of Commerce for industry and security, said the new system of broadening the list of technologies that require licenses, but exempting some trustworthy companies from the license requirement, results in more effective protections.

"We believe that the system we have set up ensures that we are protecting our national security consistent with our goal of promoting legitimate exports for civilian use," he said in an interview. "We have adopted a consistent, broad-based approach to hedging against helping China's military modernization."

But the Wisconsin Project report, made available to The New York Times, asserts that two non-military Chinese companies designated as trustworthy are in fact high-risk because of links to the Chinese government, the People's Liberation Army and other Chinese entities accused in the past of ties to Syria and Iran.

One of the Chinese companies, the BHA Aero Composites Company, is partly owned by two American companies - 40 percent by the American aircraft manufacturer Boeing and 40 percent by the aerospace materials maker Hexcel. The remaining 20 percent is owned by a Chinese government-owned company, AVIC I, or the China Aviation Industry Corporation I.

"In principle, you could find companies that would be above suspicion, but in this case they haven't done it," said Gary Milhollin, Washington director of the Wisconsin Project. "If you just look at the relations these companies have, rather than be above suspicion, they are highly suspicious."

The Wisconsin Project report also charges that both Boeing and Hexcel have been cited for past lapses in obtaining proper licenses for exports.

Spokesmen for both Boeing and Hexcel said in interviews that they are fully confident that BHA has no ties to the Chinese military and that its use of aircraft parts and materials were strictly for commercial and civilian ends.

"Boeing is not involved in any defense activities in China," said Douglas Kennett, a company spokesman. "All our activities in China are in compliance with U.S. export laws and regulations."

Both companies also say that the past failure to get proper licenses has led to tighter controls and, in any case, was the result of improper paperwork affecting products that continue to be exported as licensed.

Mr. Milhollin said that research by his staff had uncovered several links with the Chinese military establishment involving both BHA and another of the five companies, the Shanghai Hua Hong NEC Electronics Company.

AVIC I, the Chinese government entity that owns a minority share of BHA, also produces fighters, nuclear-capable bombers and aviation weapons systems for the People's Liberation Army, the report says. The State Department has cited another AVIC subsidiary, the China National Aero-Technology Import & Export Corporation, for links to arms sales to Iran and Syria.

The report also says that Shanghai Hua Hong NEC Electronics is majority owned "through a corporate chain" by the China Electronics Corporation, which the report says is a government conglomerate that produces military equipment along with consumer electronics. It has a subsidiary, the report says, that procures arms for the military.

Mr. Milhollin said that the new administration policy granting companies the right to import some technologies without prior licenses was adopted quietly as "a stealth attack on export controls."

But Mr. Mancuso, the Commerce Department official who oversees the program, noted that the department proposed it publicly in mid-2006 and adopted it a year later after lengthy public comment by interested parties and members of Congress.

In addition, he said, no Chinese company can receive sensitive technologies - as part of a category known as "validated end-users" - without a vetting of its record by the State, Energy and Defense Departments and by relevant intelligence agencies. The five companies designated in October, he said, were approved without dissent by these units of the government.

In general, the Commerce Department tries to make it easier for American companies to export to markets overseas, and there has been a particular emphasis on selling to China. The United States is expected to show a trade deficit with China of nearly $300 billion in 2007.

At the same time, at least since the 1990s, Democratic and Republican Congressional leaders have called on the Bush administration, and the prior administration of President Bill Clinton, to exercise more vigilance toward China as it seeks to modernize its aerospace defense network.

"China is a huge market for our commercial technology exports," said Mr. Mancuso. "Yet there are real security risks we are mindful of. We take that concern very, very seriously." Only those companies that have "a demonstrable record of using sensitive technologies responsibly" are approved, he said.

Beyond that, he said that companies for which licensing requirements have been lifted are subject to additional disclosure obligations, including on-site visits by American government personnel.

Business groups that advocate greater technology-sharing with China in civilian aeronautics and other areas say that the administration has been cautious in its new policy, in particular choosing Chinese companies with American partners or owners.

The three other Chinese companies announced as "validated end-users" in October are Applied Materials China, a subsidiary of Applied Materials, a maker of semiconductors based in California; Chinese facilities operated by the National Semiconductor Corporation, another American company; and the Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation, based in Shanghai.

William A. Reinsch, president of the National Foreign Trade Council, which promotes international trade, said that the Bush administration overall had tightened controls on China and that lifting license requirements on only five companies was "a spoonful of sugar to make the medicine go down."

Mr. Reinsch administered export controls as an official with the Commerce Department in the Clinton administration.

A House Republican staff member expressed a similar view. "We were told by Commerce that they were going to make some very safe choices," he said, speaking anonymously because of the sensitive nature of the subject.

The Commerce Department says that, out of $55 billion in American exports to China in 2006, only $308 million involved items that require licenses to make sure the Chinese military could not use them.

The five companies named by the department as "validated" users free of licensing requirements accounted for $54 million of those goods.



Posted by Victorian Muse at 2:32 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 NRC moves to protect employees/whistleblowers
 

NRC NEWS

U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION

Office of Public Affairs Telephone: 301/415-8200

Washington, D.C. 20555-0001

E-mail: opa@nrc.gov

Site: http://www.nrc. gov





No. 07-149


November 13, 2007





NRC AMENDS REGULATIONS TO EXTEND FINES FOR VIOLATING EMPLOYEE PROTECTION REQUIREMENTS TO ADDITIONAL ENTITIES



The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is amending its employee protection regulations to clarify its authority to impose a fine on contractors and subcontractors if they violate the NRC's regulations by discriminating against their employees for engaging in "protected activities."



The protected activities include providing information to the Commission or the employer about alleged violations of the Atomic Energy Act or the Energy Reorganization Act, refusing to engage in any practices made unlawful by these Acts if the employee has identified the alleged illegality to the employer, requesting the Commission to take action against the employer, and testifying before Congress or any federal or state proceeding on these subjects.



The amendments also allow the NRC to impose a fine on the United States Enrichment Corporation (USEC), as well as a contractor or subcontractor of USEC, if it discriminates against an employee for engaging in protected activities at its gaseous diffusion plants in Kentucky and Ohio . These plants are certified by the NRC rather than licensed.



The Commission's current employee protection regulations prohibit discrimination by those holding an NRC license for use of nuclear material, an applicant for a Commission license, a holder or an applicant for a certificate of compliance, or a contractor or subcontractor of these entities. Enforcement actions specified for violations of these requirements are denial, revocation or suspension of the license; imposition of a fine on the licensee or applicant; or other enforcement action. While these regulations prohibit discrimination by a contractor or subcontractor, they do not explicitly provide for imposition of a fine on a contractor or subcontractor.



The Commission emphasized that the amendments do not represent a change in its long-held view that licensees are responsible for maintaining control and oversight of contractor and subcontractor activities. There may be instances in which the Commission may wish to issue fines to both the responsible contractor or subcontractor and the licensee, such as in situations in which the licensee is aware of discrimination by its contractor or subcontractor and does not take immediate action to remedy the situation. Further, the Commission certified that this rule will not have a negative economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.



The amendments were published Jan. 31, 2006, as a proposed rule for public comment. The NRC received 3 comments, which are addressed in the final rule. The final rule was approved by the Commission Oct. 24 and will be published soon in the Federal Register. The amendments will be effective 30 days after publication.





###



News releases are available through a free listserv subscription at the following Web address: http://www.nrc. gov/public- involve/listserv er.html . The NRC homepage at www.nrc.gov also offers a SUBSCRIBE link. E-mail notifications are sent to subscribers when news releases are posted to NRC's Web site.





Posted by Victorian Muse at 8:40 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Postcard to use for your Congressman and Senators
 

Cafe Press has some great postcards which show an embarrassed and depressed Eagle, and have the caption, "SHAME ON YOU!" Perfect for when no other words can describe your disappointment, disgust or other emotion for what they have or have not done!

You can order these cards at this Cafe Press web site:

http://www.cafepress.com/shamestatement.188849188
Posted by Victorian Muse at 2:56 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 
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Author: Victorian Muse
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