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US business lobby calls on Trump to remove new export restrictions to China

A lobbying group, whose board of directors includes U.S. companies like Oracle.com, Amazon.com and Exxon Mobil, is calling on the Trump administration suspend an executive order that it claims has halted U.S. exports worth billions of dollar and will lead China and other countries drop U.S.-based firms from their supply chain.

The National Foreign Trade Council, in a letter to President Donald Trump, and seen by, takes aim at what is known as the Affiliates Rule. This rule prohibits American companies from supplying goods and technology, to companies that are part-owned, by sanctioned companies.

In a letter dated October 3, and never before reported, NFTC President Jake Colvin stated that the rule had "caused an immediate pause in billions of U.S. Exports." This was contrary to the desire by the NFTC to reduce the deficit in trade and increase U.S. Exports worldwide. If the rule is left in place, it will encourage other countries to switch to non-U.S. made goods. "This would weaken U.S. security, as the rest the world led by China removes American nodes" from their supply chains.

Requests for comments were not answered by the White House or the Commerce Department (which oversees export control). NFTC declined comment.

The letter shows the level of opposition from the private sector to the controversial rule that has been sought for years by China hawks at Washington in order to clamp down on Chinese companies using subsidiaries not sanctioned to bypass export restrictions and access prized technologies.

The rule was implemented on 29 September and adds firms to the Entity List that are owned at least 50% by a parent company listed in this list. The list is updated when companies take actions that are detrimental to U.S. national security or foreign policy.

China has strongly opposed the rule.

NFTC accused the Commerce Department as well of "significantly slowing" and "even temporarily" halting export license processing, especially for Chinese customers. "Thousands" of licenses, worth billions, were accumulating in the Commerce Department.

In August, it was reported that the near-paralysis and turmoil at the agency had left thousands of license requests by U.S. firms to export goods and technologies around the world, including to China. (Reporting and editing by Chris Sanders, Andrea Ricci, and Alexandra Alper)

(source: Reuters)