Donald Trump
Eases Controls on Export of Armed Drones
The Trump administration moved Friday to ease controls on
exports of armed drones, saying that allies need US technology and that other
countries outside of a non-proliferation pact were taking over the market.
The White House announced that President Donald Trump had
approved a move to diverge partly from the 1987 Missile Technology Control
Regime, in which 35 countries agreed to restrict the sales of unmanned weapons
delivery systems.
The MTCR was aimed at controlling the spread of missiles
that could deliver large payload like nuclear weapons.
But it also covered armed drones, at the time not a major
component of armed conflict as they are now.
The change ordered by Trump will reclassify armed drones
from technology whose export is severely restricted to a category that can be
considered on a case-by-case basis.
The drones in the category must have a maximum airspeed of
less than 800 kilometers per hour, which will allow sales of the Reaper and
Predator drones used by the US military, as well as others made by US defense
manufacturers.
"The MTCR's standards are more than three decades
old," the White House said in a statement.
"Not only do these outdated standards give an unfair
advantage to countries outside of the MTCR and hurt United States industry,
they also hinder our deterrence capability abroad by handicapping our partners
and allies with subpar technology."
The White House statement said two years of talks had
failed to reform the MTCR.
The move has worried arms control advocates who say the US
sale of advanced drones to more countries could fuel the global arms race.
"The Trump administration has once again weakened
international export controls on the export of lethal drones," said
Senator Bob Menendez in a statement.
"This reckless
decision makes it more likely that we will export some of our most deadly
weaponry to human rights abusers across the world," he said.