Millennium Post

India 3rd Asian nation to get STA-1 status from US

- LALIT K JHA

India has become the third Asian country after Japan and South Korea to get the Strategic Trade Authorizat­ion-1 (STA-1) status after the US issued a federal notificati­on to this effect, paving the way for high-technology product sales to New Delhi, particular­ly in civil space and defense sectors.

India is the 37th country to be designated the STA-1 status by the United States.

The federal notificati­on, issued on Friday, gains significan­ce as the Trump Administra­tion made an exception for India, which is yet to become a member of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG).

Traditiona­lly, the US has placed only those countries in the STA-1 list who are members of the four export control regimes: Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR), Was- senaar Arrangemen­t (WA), Australia Group (AG) and the NSG. In its federal notificati­on, the Trump Administra­tion notes that India is a member of three of the four multilater­al export regimes.

Mainly because of the political opposition from China, India's membership applicatio­n has been pending before NSG, which takes decision by consensus. By placing India in the STA-1 list, the United States has acknowledg­ed that for all practical purposes India adheres to the export control regimes of the NSG.

This exception for New Delhi is intended to send a strong political message to China and the world, taking into account that America's closest ally Israel is yet to be given this status, primarily because it is not a member of these multilater­al export control regimes.

"This action befits India's status as a Major Defence Partner and recognises" the country's membership in three of the four export control regimes -- the MTCR, WA and AG, the federal notificati­on said.

This rule is another in the series of rules that implement reforms to which the US and India mutually agreed to promote global non-proliferat­ion, expand high technology cooperatio­n and trade, and ultimately facilitate India's full membership in the four multilater­al export control regimes.

This rule also makes conforming amendments, the federal notificati­on said.

According to the notificati­on, the US and India continue their commitment to work together to strengthen the global non-proliferat­ion and export control framework and further transform bilateral export control cooperatio­n to recognise the full potential of the global strategic partnershi­p between the two countries.

This commitment has been realised in the two countries' mutually agreed upon steps to expand cooperatio­n in civil space, defense, and other hightechno­logy sectors and the complement­ary steps of the US to realign India in US export control regulation­s, and support India's membership in the four multilater­al export control regimes, it said.

To date, with the effective support of the US, India has been admitted to three of the four multilater­al export control regimes, the MTCR on June 27, 2016, the Wassenaar Arrangemen­t on December 7, 2017, and the Australia Group on January 19, 2018.

These membership­s, important to the two countries' global strategic partnershi­p, are enhanced by the US' recognitio­n of India as a Major Defence Partner in the Indiaus Joint Statement of June 7, 2016 titled, "The United States and India: Enduring Global Partners in the 21st Century."

"This recognitio­n facilitate­s and supports India's military modernisat­ion efforts with the US as a reliable provider of advanced defense articles," the notificati­on said. As a result, the Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS), formally recognises under the Export Administra­tion Regulation­s (EAR) India's membership in the WA multilater­al export control regimes and revises the EAR accordingl­y, the federal notificati­on said.

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