Year
2023
File Attachment
finalpaper_502_0502025542.pdf229.97 KB
Abstract
The analysis of covert procurements of military equipment and dual-use items for the deployment
of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) against Ukraine reveals lessons relevant to export controls and
safeguards. A key overlap between nuclear-related trade controls and safeguards is oversight over
manufacturing and supply capabilities of nuclear and dual-use items, necessary to control exports of
items listed on a control list, regulate non-listed items restricted or prohibited to certain end-uses,
and report relevant activities and exports to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
However, large-scale deployment of combat and reconnaissance drones in the Ukraine war reveals
that components for UAVs were successfully procured on the international market. This paper
presents examples of foreign-made dual-use items identified as used in large-scale production and
deployment of UAVs. The examples highlight the increasing difficulty of understanding global
supply chains for sensitive products and capabilities and countries’ difficulties in overseeing
domestic manufacturing and supply potential of dual-use items. In many cases, the items sought by
procuring countries are readily available for purchase on the open market, demonstrating a stringent
need for enhanced end-user verification and catch-all mechanisms. Secondary and resale markets
pose an even more complicated challenge. The examples further highlight the rising difficulties of
focusing on narrowly-defined items listed on a control list. They provide a stark warning that
proliferating countries adapt and work to undermine control lists, and highlight the need to counter
this activity to undermine proliferating countries’ abilities to conduct covert, undeclared nuclear
activities in violation of safeguards obligations. The identified challenges not only reduce the
effectiveness of national export control systems but also the effectiveness of IAEA member state
reporting based on activities and items listed in the Model Additional Protocol Annexes. They
further reduce countries’ abilities to identify and voluntarily share other relevant procurement data
with the IAEA. Updating the AP Annexes periodically is one important step that can be taken to
help address these challenges, but more are needed. If unaddressed, these challenges may reduce the
IAEA’s ability to detect the development of undeclared activities and contribute to the undermining
of global non-proliferation goals more broadly.