Panel Has a Big Say in Foreign Purchases

Security clearance for a Chinese bid for Unocal would hinge on an obscure
U.S. committee.


By Jonathan Peterson, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON - When a Dutch company sought to take over Silicon Valley Group
Inc., a high-tech firm in San Jose, the ultimate vote was cast not by
shareholders or executives or even the board of directors.

That job went to the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, a
secretive, little-known panel of U.S. officials that rules on whether
purchases of U.S. businesses by foreign entities would impair national
security and should be banned.

The committee approved the $1.6-billion purchase in 2001, but only after
setting conditions for the deal, including that the foreign owner - ASM
Lithography Holding - unload one of the California firm's assets, a
laboratory that produced optical components for spy satellites.

"If they can, they'll work out a deal with the company," explained James
Andrew Lewis, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies, of the influential U.S. panel. "If they want to deter a purchase,
that's usually what happens."

The obscure committee known as CFIUS may face a high-profile decision in the
near future: The Chinese bid to buy El Segundo-based Unocal Corp. appears
likely to trigger a national security review unless the process is derailed
by Congress.

House members voted Thursday to block the government from spending money to
recommend approval of the bid by CNOOC Ltd., an arm of government-owned
China National Offshore Oil Corp. - a backdoor way to block a CFIUS
investigation. It was not immediately clear how such a proposal would fare
in the Senate or how it would affect administration policy.

House members who oppose the Unocal takeover fear that the panel would
approve the deal, and they want to stop the process in its tracks.

The Chinese firm - which is trying to trump Chevron Corp.'s previously
announced deal for Unocal - had formally requested a review before the vote
Thursday.

CNOOC representatives contend that an investigation would put to rest any
fears that the takeover poses a security threat to the U.S. The company also
wants any objections dealt with before the acquisition goes further, and it
has suggested that it might sell certain Unocal properties, including
pipeline and storage assets, to satisfy the government panel.

"There's a long-proven process for reviewing foreign investment in the
United States," said Mark Palmer, a U.S. spokesman for the Chinese firm. "We
believe the process will be thorough and fair, and in the end it will not be
influenced by emotion or politics."

Should that process move forward, the Chinese firm will face a 12-member
committee composed of some of the most powerful officials in the U.S.
government, starting with the chairman, Treasury Secretary John W. Snow.
Other members include the secretaries of Defense, State, Homeland Security
and Commerce, the attorney general and the director of the Office of
Management and Budget.

Membership is set by law, as are strong rules on confidentiality. The panel
is not even supposed to acknowledge when a review is underway.

The mandate is purposely broad, as committee members consider whether there
is "credible evidence" that a foreign investor might take action "that
threatens to impair the national security." Issues of national defense, law
enforcement concerns and terrorism all may be weighed against the economic
pros and cons of a deal.

If substantial questions exist, the panel conducts an investigation and
makes a recommendation to the White House.

"The president has a ton of discretion in making a decision on whether or
not to block a deal," said Todd M. Malan, executive director of the
Organization for International Investment, which represents foreign firms
that have stakes in the U.S.

Intelligence, criminal justice and other officials may take an active role
in cases, even negotiating side deals with foreign parties. In contentious
cases, such as the Unocal offer, members of Congress invariably weigh in and
the issues are discussed at the pinnacle of government.

"Some people would like you to believe it's nameless, faceless bureaucrats
in the basement of some building," Malan said, alluding to the small
committee staff that is housed a block away from the Treasury Department.
"It's not. When they get together on a high-profile deal like this, it's
probably in the Cabinet room in the White House."

The panel was created in 1988, an era when U.S. economic anxieties centered
on Japan Since then, the panel has taken a look at more than 1,500 cases.
Just 25 led to full-scale investigations, and it issued a flat-out ban only
once - preventing a Chinese bid for a U.S. aircraft parts maker in 1990.
U.S. officials blocked the sale of Seattle-based Mamco Manufacturing Co. to
a Chinese military procurement firm that was accused of past efforts to
steal Western aerospace technology.

Rather than veto a deal, the committee is more likely to demand safeguards,
such as instructing a foreign purchaser to accept American board members,
pledge future cooperation with law enforcement or sell off certain parts of
the new acquisition. Its investigations are limited to 45 days, but that
prospect sometimes prompts foreign investors to back off altogether.

In recent years, technology and terrorism have altered the national security
equation and debates in the committee.

Foreign takeovers in telecommunications, for example, touch off fears that
U.S. law enforcement will lose access to wiretaps and electronic data - or
that unfriendly foreign powers may gain a platform to spy on the United
States.

In 2000, the committee allowed Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Corp. to go
ahead with its purchase of Verio Inc., an Internet service provider, but
only after obtaining a strict ban on Japanese government involvement in the
American firm.

Similar fears were prompted by the 2003 effort of two companies - Hutchison
Whampoa Ltd. of Hong Kong and Singapore Technologies Telemedia - to buy
fiber-optic network provider Global Crossing Ltd.

U.S. officials were concerned that foreign ownership of the fiber-optic
network might make the government vulnerable to eavesdropping from overseas.
In addition, members of Congress contended that Hutchison Whampoa had ties
to the Chinese military.

To defuse the concerns, Hutchison Whampoa offered to play a passive role in
the company But the committee proceeded with plans to conduct a 45-day
investigation. At that point, the Chinese firm backed out. Ultimately, the
panel allowed Singapore Technologies - which offered to put Americans on the
Global Crossing board - to make the purchase on its own.

Technology is not always a deal breaker. In March, the U.S. panel approved
the sale of IBM Corp.'s personal computer division to Lenovo Group of China.
Among the concerns were whether Lenovo would have access to IBM government
contracts that might prove useful to Chinese intelligence.

The terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, also have left a mark on the
committee. The secretary of Homeland Security became a member in 2003. Also,
the frequency of investigations has increased since Sept. 11.

"That's different. That's new," Lewis, of the Center for Strategic Studies,
said of the new weight being given to potential risks to the nation's
infrastructure.

Experts are divided on whether the Chinese bid for Unocal poses serious
issues of national security.

"The more energy resources they lock up, the more marbles they take off the
table, as energy demand rises," said Michael R. Wessel, a member of the
U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission. "This transaction needs
to go through careful scrutiny."

But Roger Cliff, a Chinese military specialist at think tank Rand Corp.,
said it was a stretch to say that control of Unocal would pose a security
threat to the U.S.

"Sure, China could use the fact that it owns Unocal to slow down production
and create a short-term crunch in energy supplies in the U.S.," he said.
"But again, I don't think it's really a major threat to U.S. national
security."

  _____ 

Times staff writer Evelyn Iritani contributed to this report.


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