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21 July 1999
Source:
http://www.usia.gov/cgi-bin/washfile/display.pl?p=/products/washfile/latest&f=99072103.clt&t=/products/washfile/newsitem.shtml
USIS Washington
File
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21 July 1999
(Administration opposes bill approved in three committees) (680) By Bruce Odessey USIA Staff Writer Washington -- Legislation to deal with the divisive issue of controlling encryption software exports is close to moving to a vote in the full U.S. House of Representatives after a crucial stop in the Rules Committee. House committees with jurisdiction on encryption export controls have reported out drastically different versions of legislation. Still other legislation has advanced in the Senate. The House Judiciary, Commerce and International Relations committees have approved with little change a bill introduced by Republican Representative Bob Goodlatte that would essentially overturn Clinton administration policy by decontrolling U.S. encryption exports of any strength that are generally available from non-U.S. manufacturers. Existing controls require Commerce Department export licenses generally for encryption software higher than 56-bit strength although certain industrial sectors, such as finance and medicine, can export stronger encryption to 44 countries. More than half of House members, including the Republican and Democratic leaders, have co-sponsored the Goodlatte bill; its chances of passing the House are therefore quite good despite administration objections. Supporters argue that no one can control the proliferation of strong encryption -- software far exceeding U.S. export-control thresholds can already be purchased from many non-U.S. sources or even downloaded from the Internet, they say -- and that existing controls simply prevent U.S. manufacturers from competing for global markets. "We are trying to control something that we can't control," Democratic Representative Ellen Tauscher said at a July 21 House Armed Services Committee meeting. Opponents of the Goodlatte bill prevailed, however, in the House Intelligence and Armed Services committees. Those committees approved versions of the legislation that basically would still allow the president to block any encryption exports for national-security reasons and require exporters to identify intended end users for exports approved under government license. The Intelligence Committee version would set the threshold for requiring export licenses at 64 bits, slightly higher than the current 56-bit threshold. The Armed Services version, approved 47-6 July 21, would let the president set the threshold and revise it upward twice a year after reviewing foreign availability of encryption products. Siding with administration officials, opponents argued that the Goodlatte bill would threaten national security by accelerating the spread of strong encryption. In July 1 testimony before Armed Services, Defense Deputy Secretary John Hamre said the Goodlatte bill would create "a tidal wave that would crush your national security and law enforcement agencies that are protecting this country .... "Unregulated release of the strongest encryption is going to do one thing: put more troops' lives at risk," Hamre said. The Goodlatte bill has now gone the same distance in this session of Congress as it went in the past session. Last year, however, the chairman of the powerful Rules Committee, who opposed the bill, blocked it from going to the House floor. He has since retired. Current Rules Committee members are divided over the Goodlatte bill. The new Republican committee chairman is a cosponsor, but the next-senior Republican is an opponent, for example. How the Rules Committee shapes the five committee versions for consideration by the full House is crucial to the outcome. What influence Republican Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert might exert on House consideration of the bill was not clear. The Senate remains divided over encryption export controls as well. One bill has advanced there; the Senate Commerce Committee approved in June a bill sponsored by Senator John McCain, its Republican chairman. The McCain bill would decontrol exports of any encryption up to 64 bits and make possible exports of greater strength on a finding of foreign availability but allow the president to block any encryption export for national security reasons. Meanwhile, in May a federal appeals court panel in San Francisco ruled that the administration's existing encryption export controls violated the First Amendment right of free speech, but that ruling has not taken effect while the administration appeals it to a higher court.