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Appendix H: Bibliography
Pages 297-310

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From page 297...
... A response from the Reagan administration to a set of questions from the Joint Economic Committee on a wide range of East-West (i.e., West-East) technology trade issues.
From page 298...
... loose export controls and legally or otherwise acquired vital goods and equipment. Perle, Richard N
From page 299...
... Describes the Soviet intelligence operation in France including the "Farewell affair," the story of the high-level Soviet employee who passed to the French government hundreds of critical, classified Soviet documents detailing the intensive Soviet technology acquisition effort. The Soviet Ability to Absorb Western Technology Agres, Ted.
From page 300...
... Discusses the importance of Western technology to Soviet economic and military power, the array of export controls maintained by CoCom, the consequences of trading with the East, and the case for differentiation between the Soviet Union and the nations in Eastern Europe. Channon, Stanley L
From page 301...
... strategic requirements, the mechanisms through which information about them is transferred, and the current effectiveness of export controls and the CoCom agreement. "The principal findings of the Task Force are: design and manufacturing know-how are the key elements for control of strategic technology; this know-how is most effectively transferred when there is intent to do so, and the donor organization takes active steps in that direction; and high velocity, i.e., rapidly changing technologies, are the ones for which export controls are most effective in slowing the flow of technology." U.S.
From page 302...
... Balancing Information Control With Open Communication Center for Science and Technology Policy, Graduate School of Business Administration, New York University. Current Issues in Export Controls of Technology (November 1981)
From page 303...
... U.S. Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration, Office of Trade and Investment Analysis.
From page 304...
... export control policy has gone awry and that instead of wasting resources trying to control too many products, many of which have no strategic value, the administration should focus controls on advanced goods that can truly enhance the military capability of U.S. adversaries.
From page 305...
... This article outlines the principal relevant statutes, considers national security export controls directed to the Soviet Union and its allies, and examines export controls imposed for foreign policy reasons. The article comments briefly on enforcement and concludes by discussing foreign responses to U.S.
From page 306...
... Summarizes the major provisions of the 1979 Export Administration Act, highlighting those provisions that have led to problems of interpretation or execution; recounts major provisions in U.S. export control policy toward the Soviet Union since 1979; and discusses the impacts and implications of those events-for the domestic economy, for U.S.
From page 307...
... . "The Administration of Export Controls under the Export Administration Act." (Statement before the Subcommittee on International Finance and Monetary Policy, Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, April 30, 1981.)
From page 308...
... The author notes that "the progression from control on strategic exports to the East, on which there was, and is, a substantial consensus within the [Atlantic] alliance, to controls as sanctions or penalties for Soviet political behavior, catalyzed debate within the Western Alliance on the many tough questions about East-West trade, technology transfer and export controls." This work traces the history of Western technology sales to the East and export controls, and it examines Western efforts to control the sales of strategic technology.
From page 309...
... . Presents capsule descriptions of existing or emerging policy concerning the right of access to official information or records held by governments in Western Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and Scandinavia.


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