Why in the news?
- The Wassenaar Arrangement is struggling to keep pace with advancements in cloud technology, necessitating revisions in its control lists as well as stronger enforcement mechanisms.
Wassenaar Arrangement
- What is it?:
- The Wassenaar Arrangement on Export Controls for Conventional Arms and Dual-Use Goods and Technologies is a multilateral export control regime (MECR).
- Established in 1996 at Wassenaar, Netherlands, it succeeded the earlier Cold War-era Coordinating Committee for Multilateral Export Controls (COCOM).
- Objectives:
- Promote transparency and responsibility in international transfers of conventional arms and dual-use technologies.
- Prevent destabilizing accumulations of weapons and sensitive technologies by rogue actors or states.
- Complement other non-proliferation regimes (like NSG, MTCR, Australia Group).
- Key Features:
- Membership: 42 participating states (as of 2025) including the US, Russia, Japan, most EU nations.
- India joined in December 2017, strengthening its case for membership in other global regimes.
- Control Lists:
- Munitions List (conventional arms).
- Dual-Use Goods & Technologies List (items with civilian and military applications).
- Decisions are taken by consensus; not legally binding but politically significant.
- Participating states maintain national export control policies consistent with WA guidelines.
- Relevance for India:
- Membership has given India access to advanced technologies, crucial for defence, space, and nuclear programs.
- Strengthens India’s profile as a responsible nuclear power and helps in its pursuit of NSG membership.
- Allows India to align domestic export control lists (e.g., SCOMET list) with global standards.
- Challenges:
- Difficulty in adapting controls to emerging technologies (AI, cloud computing, cybersecurity tools, drones).
- Enforcement issues due to non-binding nature.
- Growing geopolitical tensions (US–China, Russia–West) reduce consensus.