HR 1883 -- 09/14/

September 14, 1999
(House)


H.R. 1883 - Iran Nonproliferation Act of 1999
(Gilman (R) NY and 212 cosponsors)

The Administration strongly opposes H.R. 1883, the "Iran Nonproliferation Act of 1999." The Administration shares with the Congress a strong interest in promoting nonproliferation, and in combating Iran's efforts to acquire weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and their missile delivery systems. U.S. leadership is critical to the required international effort to attack this problem. H.R. 1883 would weaken the U.S. ability to persuade the international community to halt such transfers to Iran. Because the bill would undermine U.S. nonproliferation goals and objectives, the President's senior advisers would recommend that the President veto the bill, if it is presented to him in its current form.

Because of the bill's unworkably low standard of evidence and broad scope, the bill would require the identification of scores of entities in member countries of the multilateral regimes - entities that have complied with their country's laws and the rules of the nonproliferation regimes. This would have the effect of undermining multilateral support that is vital to effectively fight proliferation, as well as support for other U.S. goals.

While improvements have been made to the original legislation, the bill's reporting requirements remain onerous and unworkable and would divert scarce resources away from the fight against proliferation. In addition, the bill's sanctions are unnecessary given the wide range of existing nonproliferation sanctions laws and the discretionary legal authorities that the Administration has available and has already applied to penalize ten Russian entities involved with Iran's missile and nuclear programs.

H.R. 1883 is particularly inappropriate now that the United States has achieved substantial progress with the Russian government in establishing the policy, legislative, and institutional basis for a system of effective Russian export controls. The Russians have recently enacted tough new export control legislation, and have adopted a U.S. game plan designed to cut off future contacts between Russian entities and Iran's WMD/missile programs. These controls are essential for Russia to be able to police its own industries, scientists, and engineers and to stem the flow of Russian technology and expertise to Iran. Passage of H.R. 1883 would ignore the progress achieved and would undermine the efforts of Russian officials who have cooperated to strengthen export controls.

The restriction on "extraordinary payments" in connection with the International Space Station (ISS) could negatively impact ISS assembly and operations without advancing U.S. nonproliferation goals. Despite technical changes and exemptions, the determination standard for "extraordinary payments" is far too broad, making compliance inherently subjective and ill-defined. The restriction could hinder NASA's ability to work with Russian organizations that are cooperating with the United States to enforce nonproliferation measures, as well as strengthen elements in Russia that oppose Russian participation in the U.S.-led ISS. It could be viewed by other ISS partners as a unilateral U.S. action in a multilateral program. Finally, it could result in significant cost growth and schedule delay to the United States and other ISS partners by restricting needed access to Russia?s unique capabilities and expertise, and constrain NASA's ability to rapidly respond to emergent safety and operational requirements on the ISS.