S/S–NSC Files: Lot 63 D 351: NSC 91 Series

Note by the Executive Secretary of the National Security Council (Lay) to the National Security Council 1

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NSC 91

East-West Trade

The enclosed proposed statement of policy on the subject, transmitted by the Secretary of State, is submitted herewith for consideration by the National Security Council, the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of Commerce, and the Economic Cooperation Administrator, at the next regular Council meeting on Thursday, November 2, 1950.2 Also enclosed for information is a staff study prepared in the Department of State and upon which the foregoing statement of policy is based.

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In transmitting the enclosures, the Secretary of State stated that, in view of the difficulties which have arisen in connection with the implementation of the action taken by the National Security Council following its review of Export Controls and Security Policy on August 24, 1950 (NSC Action No. 347),3 he believes it would be helpful if the Council would again consider this problem and clarify its recommendations. He hoped that this could be given urgent attention and considered at the next Council meeting.

It is recommended that, if the enclosed statement of policy is adopted, it be submitted to the President for consideration with the recommendation that he approve it and direct its implementation by all appropriate executive departments and agencies of the U.S. Government in accordance with the procedures contained in paragraph 2 thereof.

James S. Lay, Jr.
[Enclosure 1]

Draft Policy Statement Prepared in the Department of State

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Proposed Statement by the National Security Council on Export Controls and Security Policy in Elaboration of NSC Action No. 347

1. It is recommended that the following policy be adopted by the NSC:

a.
After conclusion of negotiations with the Consultative Group countries on commodities on the United States 1A list and after adequate notice to these countries, non-agreed 1A items which the United States considers sufficiently strategic to justify this action should be denied to those countries unless assurance is obtained that identical items will be totally denied to Soviet Bloc countries.
b.
After conclusion of the negotiations on the items in the United States 1B list and after adequate notification to the Consultative Group countries, licenses for non-agreed 1B items which the United States considers to be sufficiently strategic should be similarly denied to those countries unless assurances are obtained that shipments from those countries to Soviet Bloc countries of the identical item will not be increased.
c.
When either a or b above becomes effective, consideration shall be given to similar action with respect to specialized capital equipment for the production of items covered by a and b above.
d.
The concept of “identical” should be understood to mean:
(1)
In the case of capital equipment, items which carry out the same operation.
(2)
In the case of semi-finished or finished items, items which serve the identical purpose.
e.
Procedures should be worked out for applying a comparable policy as soon as practicable to friendly countries not in the Consultative Group.

If items are accepted by the Consultative Group countries for inclusion in International Lists I or II, no assurances of the type referred to in a and b above will be required from these countries.

2. The following procedures should be followed in implementing this policy:

a.
When the Secretary of State determines that negotiations on International List I have been concluded or that action along these lines will not interfere with the successful conclusion of those negotiations:
(1)
The Secretary of Commerce shall review United States 1A items that have not been accepted for either International List I or II to determine whether they should remain on the United States 1A list for embargo to Soviet Bloc countries.
(2)
Those 1A items which are retained on the United States 1A list shall then be reviewed by the NSC, or a committee appointed by it, to determine whether their exportation from the Consultative Group countries to the Soviet Bloc is of sufficient strategic importance to justify denial of licenses for shipment from the United States to the Consultative Group countries.
(3)
In the case of items which are so determined, the United States should notify the Consultative Group countries that licenses will not be issued for such items unless assurances are obtained from the government of the importing country that all shipments of identical items to the Soviet Bloc will be denied and the item in question will not be transshipped.
b.
When the Secretary of State determines that negotiations with respect to items in the United States 1B list have been concluded or that the following action would not interfere with the successful conclusion of such negotiations:
(1)
The Secretary of Commerce shall review those United States 1B items which have not been accepted for the International Lists I or II to determine whether they should remain on the United States 1B list.
(2)
The NSC, or a committee appointed by it, shall review those items which remain on the United States 1B list after that review in order to determine whether their quantitative control by the Consultative Group countries is of sufficient security importance to the United States to justify denial of licenses by the United States to a Consultative Group country.
(3)
The United States should notify the Consultative Group countries that licenses will not be issued for such items unless assurances have been given by the government of the supporting country that shipments of identical items to Soviet Bloc countries will not be increased and that the item in question will not be transshipped.
c.
Until decisions are made as required by 2–a and –b above, licensing policies in effect prior to August 24, 1950 will apply. Thus the Department of Commerce should immediately approve license applications now being held under Program Determination No. 381,4 in accordance with policies and procedures in effect before that date.
d.
In the case of non-Consultative Group countries of Western Europe, the basic policy will be implemented as follows:
(1)
Switzerland and Sweden
The United States should propose to the Consultative Group that the governments of Switzerland and Sweden be informed that the Consultative Group countries will no longer approve licenses for the export of International List I items to these governments unless assurances are received that such items, or their International List I end-products, will not be exported to the Soviet Bloc. When it is determined that a favorable degree of agreement by the Consultative Group countries has been reached on International List II, an approach should be made through the Consultative Group to obtain cooperation from Sweden and Switzerland on this list. When the procedures outlined above in sections 2–a and –b are made effective they should be applied to Switzerland and Sweden by the United States. In the event that the Consultative Group fails to agree to the action proposed by the United States relating to International List I, the United States should take such action unilaterally.
(2)
Other Countries
The trade of other Western European countries with the Soviet Union and its satellites will be examined to determine whether any comparable action with respect to United States exports to them may be necessary or desirable.
e.
The Secretary of State will transmit to the NSC a report of the tripartite negotiations on export controls upon their conclusion in London, and will also transmit a report of the negotiating situation as a result of the Consultative Group meeting which takes place in Paris on November 15.5

[Enclosure 2]

Staff Study Prepared in the Department of State

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Implementation of NSC Action No. 347

problem

The problem is to determine a licensing policy for the treatment of exports to Western Europe which will accomplish the intent of [Page 220] paragraph (c) of NSC Action 347 without conflicting with the negotiation of an agreement on parallel action with friendly governments as required by paragraph (a) of NSC Action 347.

discussion

NSC Action 347 was issued on August 24 as a result of the NSC review of Export Controls and Security Policy (NSC 696 and 69/17).

NSC Action (a) states that negotiations should be continued with Western European countries for an agreement on export control policy. NSC Action (c) states that exports from the United States of strategic items to a Western European country should be denied when that country ships identical items or equivalent amounts thereof to Eastern Europe. It is not clear from the NSC statement of Action (c) what should be included in the concept of “strategic items” or what constitutes the shipment of an “identical item” or an “equivalent amount thereof”.

The evident intent of Action (c) was to prevent shipments from the United States to Western European countries which would have the result of permitting the export to the Soviet Bloc of strategic items which would not otherwise take place. This is a legitimate use of our licensing procedure, and involves simply action to assure ourselves against transshipment or the equivalent of transshipment. However, to attempt to influence by such action the policies of friendly countries, where shipment by them is unrelated to their imports from the United States, would be unjustified coercion. It would also represent an interpretation of paragraph (c) which would be inconsistent with paragraph (a). The intent of Action (a) was to continue the voluntary negotiation of agreements on security export controls with the Western European countries, particularly with the countries of the Consultative Group. It is essential to avoid injecting an element of coercion into these negotiations.

The effort by negotiation to bring about substantial parallel action by Western European countries has been carried to ministerial levels. It was discussed in the recent Foreign Ministers’ meeting in New York.8 It was then decided to continue discussions among the United States, United Kingdom and France, in London. Those discussions are now in progress. The agreement reached there will be submitted to the other Consultative Group countries in Paris.

These negotiations would be affected by any action taken in implementation of paragraph (c). The American negotiators have already expressed serious concern at the probable effect upon these talks of [Page 221] the action under paragraph (c) contemplated by the Department of Commerce and contained in Advisory Committee on Export Policy Program Determination No. 381 of September 18. This Program Determination provides for the denial of 1A exports to Western European countries unless assurances are received within certain time limits to the effect that the countries in question are not exporting the same items to the Soviet Bloc either in transit trade or from local production. (It is understood that a Program Determination to cover 1B items is planned.) These assurances would be required not only with respect to 1A items rejected by the Consultative Group but also with respect to items still under negotiation and even those that have already been accepted for quantitative controls, as opposed to embargo.

In view of the effect which the enforcement of this policy would have upon the negotiations in London and Paris the Commerce Department has agreed to postpone action under Program Determination No. 381 until the policy could be reviewed. In the meantime, it has agreed to issue export licenses for essential articles where postponement of licensing would cause difficulty in the present negotiations with the British and French. Most licenses for Western Europe are, however, being held without action by the Department of Commerce.

It is the belief of the State Department that the intention of the NSC was to obtain the adoption by Western Europe of adequate security controls with a minimum impairment of other defense objectives. A policy of coercion in the negotiation of an agreement on security export controls with Western European countries would not serve our interests for the following reasons:

1.
An effective program of multilateral export controls depends upon voluntary agreement by the cooperating countries. We cannot expect that an agreement imposed by coercion would be enforced by those countries with the same vigor as one adopted voluntarily, particularly in such matters as transit trade control, which depends upon an effective degree of voluntary cooperation from other countries.
2.
An agreement imposed by coercion would not enlist the Consultative Group countries in supporting the United States in an effective approach to such non-cooperating countries as Sweden and Switzerland. The denial of export licenses in order to influence the negotiations could affect the willingness of NATO countries to give us their wholehearted cooperation in the many other fields of action essential to the development of Western defense.
3.
A program based primarily on unilateral denials of exports from the United States would be [by] itself not necessarily result in any diminution of strategic exports from Western Europe. It would be limited in its effectiveness to those strategic commodities which the countries in question happen to be purchasing from the United States. It would not of itself prevent shipment to the Soviet Bloc of strategic items of indigenous manufacture in Western Europe.

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The State Department’s proposals for meeting these problems are outlined below under the heading of “Recommendation”.

The purposes of these policy proposals can be summarized as follows:

(a)
To permit conclusion of the best possible voluntary agreement with Western European countries.
(b)
When such an agreement has been obtained, to use United States licensing to friendly countries to assure that no shipment by the United States will result in greater availability to the Soviet Bloc of a strategic item.

The application of the policy in the case of a 1A item and capital equipment capable of producing such an item would call for complete embargo of such a 1A item by the friendly country. It may be questioned why a less rigid rule is applied in the case of United States 1B items, since the United States in practice is itself embargoing almost all shipments of such items to the Soviet Bloc. There are several reasons why a distinction must be made.

(a)
These items were adopted for our 1B list with the understanding that moderate shipments to the Soviet Bloc would not add substantially to Soviet war potential.
(b)
Most of these items have been proposed by the United States for International List II, which calls for quantitative controls, and agreement on their status has been reached in some cases.
(c)
The inclusion of an item in this list was without regard to the need that might exist for some shipments to the East, in the interest of the economic strength of Western Europe.

It should also be borne in mind that the policy proposed is to be more or less automatically applied. There will be cases where a shipment by the United States of a 1B item might have the effect of permitting a Western European country to maintain shipments of a similar item to the Soviet Bloc. In this case, the provision that Western European shipments must not be increased, is clearly inadequate. However, every effort will be made in the negotiations to achieve a reduction in shipments of 1B items. Furthermore, it would be within the power of the NSC Committee, proposed in the following recommendation, to lay down more rigid requirements for individual items, where this appears desirable.

recommendation

[Here follows the text of the draft policy statement prepared in the Department of State, printed above.]

  1. The source text was circulated to the National Security Council under a cover sheet entitled “A Report to the National Security Council by the Secretary of State on East-West Trade, October 30, 1950.”
  2. For the Record of Actions of the Council Meeting of November 2, see p. 225.
  3. See the Record of Actions of the Council Meeting of August 24, p. 179.
  4. See telegram 1498, September 23, to Paris, p. 194, and telegram 1962, October 16, to London, p. 208.
  5. A report prepared by the Department of State on January 8, 1951, on recent progress in export control negotiations was circulated to the National Security Council on January 29, 1951. (S/S–NSC Files, Lot 63 D 351, NSC 104 Series)
  6. See the letter of April 25 from the Secretary of Commerce to the Executive Secretary of the National Security Council, p. 83.
  7. August 21, p. 163.
  8. For a report on the meeting under reference, see Jessup’s memorandum of October 11 to Lay, p. 202.