LETTER TO LIONEL H. OLMER FROM G. A. KEYWORTH

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP85M00364R000200240041-2
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
12
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 24, 2009
Sequence Number: 
41
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 8, 1982
Content Type: 
LETTER
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PDF icon CIA-RDP85M00364R000200240041-2.pdf504.78 KB
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Approved For Release 2009/04/24: CIA-RDP85M00364R000200240041-2 THE WHITE HOUSE December. 8, 1982 Not referred to DOC. Waiver applies. Dear Lionel, Considering the many discussions. that have ensued about the request for export of the HYSHARE 700 computer to the People's Republic of China, I feel compelled to explain my strong support for this request. The primary issue is not the intrinsic technology level of the hardware, which is mid-1970's vintage, but the enhanced system capability provided by the HYSHARE 700. it incorporates analog computers with twice the capa- bility contained in a downgraded version that is currently approved for export to the PRC. However, while this expanded system capability does offer the potential for practical solution of more complex prob- lems, it is my opinion that honoring this request would have little impact on their military capability. Facili- tating their missile trajectory calculations hardly compromises our own strategic interests. Their ballistic missiles represent a "force de frappe" to deter the Soviet Union, albeit to a marginal degree. If we choose to reject every request of potential military value, regardless of its significance, then I question how the President's directives to implement a more liberal export control policy toward China can be-achieved. Export of the HYSHARE 700 computer does not entail "major risks to our, national security" and. is thoroughly consonant with my interpretation of the President's export control policy for the PRC. Considering the great importance of maintaining and.extenclinn U.S. relations with the People's Republic, I strongly-reconanend approval of this request. Very truly yours, NSC review completed. G. A. hcyworth Science Advisor to the President j= The Honorable Lionel II. 01mer 0 o1 Under Secretary for International 0 Trade Department of commerce via--hin(Iton, D.C. 20230 ti t;'C 1', kt"Il Approved For Release 2009/04/24: CIA-RDP85M00364R000200240041-2 Approved For Release 2009/04/24: CIA-RDP85M00364R000200240041-2 EXPORT ADMINISTRATION REVIEW BOARD January 17, 198.3 Participants Secretary'Baldrige, Chairman Secretary Shultz Secretary Weinberger CIA Director Casey Science Advisor Keyworth Assistant Secretary i'.eland (for Secretary Regan) Gus Weiss, NSC (for Judge Clark) Additional Attendees Under Secretary Olmer Assistant Secretary Perle, Defense Assistant Secretary Wolfowitz, State David Laux, NSC CIA David Griese, CIA Jonathan Howe, State Michael E. Zac'haria, Commerce.(Notetaker) STAT Approved For Release 2009/04/24: CIA-RDP85M00364R000200240041-2 Approved For Release 2009/04/24: CIA-RDP85M00364R000200240041-2 Attachment B Analysis of Attached Charts Chart 1 illustrates the increasing number of cases received and approved for the years 1979 through 1982. The chart, however, says nothing about the level of sophistication of the cases which have been approved nor the types of conditions that may have been imposed on licenses to the PRC. Chart 2 shows that the PRC two-times guideline has been applied to only 32 product categories out of a potential 400 plus categories which might pertain to products being exported to the PRC. This means that Commerce and Defense have only agreed upon the application of the-two-times policy in these 32 categories, and all other product categories require a case-by-case review. Although there is some agreement on the application of the two-times policy in 17 CCL entries, it does not mean that an entire CCL entry is covered by the two-times policy. For example, in the CCL entry 1529, Electronic: Instruments, there are as many as'15 major product sub-categories, but for only 4 is there an agreement to apply the two-times policy. Eighty percent of all PRC licenses received fall within 10 CCL entries (see chart 3). Seventy-five percent of the cases fall into only 6 of the CCL entries, with computers (CCL 1565A) comprising almost 41 percent of all applications received. Again, as stated earlier and as shown on chart 3, even in those instances where the two-times benchmark is applied to a given CCL entry, it does not address all the products within that entry. Exports of computers (CCL 1565A) are treated quite differently from exports to either the USSR or the-Free World. For example, 14 different technical parameters are used in determining whether a given computer system will be licensed to the PRC. In contrast, only 2 parameters, bus rate and processing data rate, are used for determining which computers may be exported to various Free World countries. Computers requested for export to the PRC are subject to a far more time-consuming stringent review which considers 12 additional technical parameters beyond bus rate and processing data rate. Charts 4 and 5 show 3 of those additional parameters. Chart 4 shows that the two-times policy does apply to the size of .internal memory, yet this level of sophistication is dramatically less than what can be licensed to the Free World. The size of the graphic display is less than two-times that of Approved For Release 2009/04/24: CIA-RDP85M00364R000200240041-2 Approved For Release 2009/04/24: CIA-RDP85M00364R000200240041-2 the USSR and considerably less than for the Free World. Chart 5 also shows that performance-speed of disk memory commodities exported to the PRC are less than two-times that of the USSR, and once agaa.n, dramatically less than disk memory devices that can be licened to the Free World. The two-times policy, even in those instances where it has been successfully implemented, usually'alloys for the licensing of commodities to the PRC which are dramatically less technically sophisticated than those commodities licensed to the Free World, including countries like India or Yugoslavia. Chart 6,.Mask Alignment Equipment, which is used for microcircuit semiconduq*or production, illustrates a case where two-times is not meanin~'ful because all such equipment is denied export to the USSR. Because the two-times policy cannot be applied, an agreement between Defense and Commerce was reached to establish that the manufacture of 4K memory chips would be the standard, but chips between 4K and 16K would be decided on a case-by-case basis. This is in contrast to the Free World availability of 64K chips and the capacity to produce them. The capacity to produce 256K chips which is now developing in several countries, will also become widespread. Chart 7 illustrates how the two-times policy would apply to A-to-D converters. It also dramatically demonstrates the disparity between products licensed for the PRC and those for the Free World. An A-to-D converter is a microcircuit essential in converting analog information into a digital format. Although the PRC two-times benchmark is 100 kilohertz, the state-of-the-art for the Free World is 50,000 kilohertz or 500 times that of the PRC. Chart 8 illustrates an example where the PRC benchmark and the USSR benchmark is the same. Oscilloscopes below 100 megahertz are not controlled to any country. For the PRC, exceptions can be granted for up to 250 megahertz or that slightly above oscilloscopes licensed to the USSR-. However, the 250 megahertz guideline may be appropriate, because oscilloscopes in higher ranges are widely used for nuclear development. In essence, the commodities shown in the charts are from the most active PRC commodity. license application areas. They indicate that the two-times policy, in some instances, cannot even be applied and, in instances where it is applied, it does not usually represent a major "liberalization" of the licensing decisions, especially when contrasted to the treatment. of the same commodities going to the Free World, Yugoslavia, or India. Approved For Release 2009/04/24: CIA-RDP85M00364R000200240041-2 Approved For Release 2009/04/24: CIA-RDP85M00364R000200240041-2 N N j.......... CD cc) N N 0 U w, * LL O Q U N NI C, ) (` I :............ CC) N T- T T Nt., I Ir) . O ..... 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