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<TITLE>2001Book - Final</TITLE>
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<HR SIZE="2"><P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="7" FACE="Palatino">
Chapter 26
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="5" FACE="Palatino">
U.S. Export Controls and the Future <BR>
Transatlantic Marketplace
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
Dr. Robert H. Trice<BR>
Senior Vice President for Corporate Business Development, Lockheed Martin
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<BR>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
<FONT COLOR="#000000" FACE="Palatino" SIZE="7">M</FONT>y comments on the environmental factors that promote and deter greater
 defense industrial cooperation are based on two fundamental premises: first,
 that a healthy transatlantic industrial base is essential to a robust,
 unified NATO, and second, that privately owned aerospace and defense companies
 will transform themselves to adapt to the realities of the transatlantic
 marketplace, whatever those realities turn out to be. The companies will
 either grow, shrink, consolidate, or evaporate as market conditions and
 shareholder demands warrant.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B>STRENGTHENING TRANSATLANTIC COOPERATION</B>
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The first issue to consider is the overall health of the marketplace. A
 significantly more liberal export-control regime will be irrelevant if
 countries are not buying any goods. After 10 years of steadily declining
 U.S. procurement budgets and after the shedding of more than a million
 workers, a consolidated group of half a dozen or so large American defense
 companies now sees a stable and probably moderately increasing annual procurement
 account of $55 to $60 billion. This account is supplemented by an R&amp;D budget
 of $30+ billion, about two-thirds of which is addressable by U.S. companies.
 The Operations and Maintenance account adds another $20 to 30 billion in
 opportunities, for a total addressable U.S. market of around $100 to $110
 billion per year. <FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="2"></FONT>
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In contrast, defense spending in the other NATO countries continues to
 decline. Despite years of rhetoric that European procurement budgets must
 be increased, they have not been. As a result, our European industry colleagues
 have responded in at least four ways:
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<LI><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
They have consolidated and significantly reduced the number of defense
 workers and, to the maximum extent possible, reduced or eliminated government
 ownership and control.
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<LI><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
The largest companies have demanded national and/or European Union guarantees
 that, for industrial base purposes, European-only R&amp;D and production programs
 will proceed, whether or not a comparable or superior U.S. system or alternative
 exists.
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<LI><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
When there is no national alternative system and U.S. systems are procured,
 European companies and governments receive unprecedented levels of technology
 transfer and industrial offsets from American companies.
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<LI><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
European services are going where the money and new technologies are&#151;the
 U.S. And they are increasing their American market share the old-fashioned
 way&#151;they are buying it. In April 2000, 26 European-headquartered companies
 owned nearly 200 defense subsidiaries in the U.S. BAE Systems, the reigning
 British national defense champion, correctly and proudly noted that it
 is now the fifth largest U.S. defense company, with more sales and workers
 in America than in the U.K.
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
Because of these changes, the current transatlantic industrial landscape
 is a hodgepodge of conflicting interests, policies, and actions. We must
 determine the best way to transform the most traditionally nationalistic
 industrial institutions&#151;those originally developed to provide the means
 for protecting national sovereignty&#151;into forward-looking, vibrant, high-technology
 companies that can effectively and efficiently deliver the systems and
 services required to advance the security interests of all NATO and major
 non-NATO Allies.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B>TRANSFORMING THE SYSTEM</B>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
To our mind, our government customers need to do three things:
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<LI><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
Align military requirements so that multiple NATO governments can agree
 on how best to operate together to support mutual defense interests.
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<LI><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
Once the governments agree on these common standards, they must follow
 through on commitments to fund the relevant programs at adequate and predictable
 levels during their developmental and production cycles.
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<LI><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
The U.S. and its allies must agree on workable, common-sense mechanisms
 for ensuring that all industrial partners have access to the technologies
 necessary to compete effectively for these programs. Whichever partners
 win, they should be able to fulfill their commitments to their government
 customers.
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</UL>
<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
If these three conditions are met, we in industry guarantee that we can
 and will form competing transatlantic teams to provide our military customers
 with viable alternatives for making weapon system solutions. The Medium
 Extended Air Defense System (MEADS), the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF), and
 TRACER/Future Scout Vehicles are illustrating how this new industrial model
 might work.
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
The new system would be substantially different from the industrial participation/offset
 regime that currently accompanies defense sales within NATO. Guarantees
 of limited work packages to local industries, sometimes irrespective of
 their competitiveness, will gradually be replaced by higher-risk, much
 higher-reward teaming arrangements in which those with the best technology
 and the most creative and cost-effective solutions will prevail and prosper.

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We also would expect these transatlantic partnerships to sort out how they
 will compete with and against each other in third-country markets. We need
 NATO governments and industries to get serious about setting up a multilateral
 export-control regime to ensure two things: first, that NATO&#146;s most sensitive
 technologies do not end up in the wrong hands and, second, that we all
 conduct our business according to the highest legal and ethical standards.

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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
Currently, the U.S. spends twice as much every year on procurement and
 three times as much on R&amp;D as all the rest of NATO. In the absence of agreed-to
 system requirements and mutually shared funding commitments among Allies,
 it is unlikely the Americans will give the Europeans a &#147;free ride&#148; by providing
 access to technologies that might be used to drive European-only system
 solutions or that could find their way to enemies of the U.S., NATO, or
 their Allies. However, if the Alliance is to mature and the transatlantic
 market is truly to develop, the U.S. must fundamentally reform its export-control
 system in at least four ways. The American regime needs to be more 1) transparent,
 2) consistent, 3) timely, and, above all, 4) limited to controlling only
 genuinely critical technologies.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B>CONCLUDING REMARKS</B>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
Last year, over 50% of Lockheed Martin&#146;s export license and technical assistance
 agreement requests were to NATO countries. When we add major non-NATO Allies
 (e.g., Japan, Australia, and New Zealand), the figure increases to 73%
 of our total applications. From our perspective, if we can focus on facilitating
 improved defense trade among America, NATO, and their major allies, we
 will establish the basis for conducting reasonable business with all other
 U.S. defense partners.
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
Building on last year&#146;s Defense Trade Security Initiative (DTSI), U.S.
 industry is prepared and ready to work with the new administration and
 Congress on a number of specific initiatives. We believe the timing is
 right for such an overhaul as the new administration sets its first-term
 priorities. If U.S. industry and the U.S. government, working within an
 alliance context, can take the first steps in making technological cooperation
 with NATO more predictable and less frustrating for Europeans, we may,
 in turn, create incentives for more joint planning and systems development.
 These positive steps, in turn, might make it easier for European governments
 to explain to skeptical parliaments and publics why it makes sense to spend
 more on defense. Otherwise, we fear the capabilities gap across the Atlantic
 will only increase, with potentially serious consequences for the industrial
 and military strength of NATO.
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