MONDAY, 15 JUNE 2026
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ITEMS FROM THE FEDERAL REGISTER
State Dept Proposes Amendment of ITAR Parts 122, 123, 124, 126, and 130; Seeks Comments
Future Federal Register
OTHER GOVERNMENT SOURCES
CBP Cargo Systems Messages
Commerce/BIS (Nothing new.)
DoD/DCSA Announcements (Nothing new.)
DoD/DSCA (Nothing new.)
OMB/OIRA BIS and DDTC Reviews (Nothing new.)
State/DDTC: Proposed ITAR Part 130 Changes to Reduce Reporting Burden
Treasury/OFAC (Nothing new.)
UK Export Control Joint Unit (No relevant items)
US Trade Representative (No new items.)
White House Executive Actions (No relevant items.)
NEWS
Breaking Defense: “Pentagon may ‘sacrifice’ traditional weapons to buy more drones if reconciliation fails: CTO”
Diaz: “23 States File 122 Appeal, IEEPA Refund Update, OFAC Sanctions”
ECD: “Bill Aims to Increase License-Free Defense Trade Under AUKUS”
Shapiro: “CBP Releases New Forced Labor Import Guidance: What You Need to Know”
OPINION
Aero News: “How One B-2 Engineer Became the Center of a Major National Security Case”
Akin: DoD Proposes to Expand FOCI Disclosure and Mitigation Requirements to Unclassified Contracts
Export Practitioner: “U.S. AI Order Puts Anthropic at Center of Export-Control Fight”
ST&R Trade Report: “Import and Export Information Collections Under Review”
Financial Times: “Defence Tech Start-Up Anduril Calls for Reset of US Arms Export Controls”
TRAINING EVENTS & CONFERENCES
ACI Presents: “EAR Compliance & Licensing Masterclass + ITAR Week” (Virtual Series, 13 - 31 July)
EX/IM MOVERS & SHAKERS
List of Export/Import Job Openings
EDITOR’S NOTES
Bartlett’s Unfamiliar Quotations
Today in History
Do You Need to Update Your Daily Bugle Profile?
Are Your Copies of Export/Import Regulations Current?
Do You Have Access to the Latest and Greatest ITAR and FTR?
ITEMS FROM THE FEDERAL REGISTER
1. State Dept Proposes Amendment of ITAR Parts 122, 123, 124, 126, and 130; Seeks Comments
(Source: 91 FR 35926, 15 Jun 2026) [Excerpts]
AGENCY: Department of State.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
SUMMARY: In support of the policy directed in Executive Order 14268 to reduce rules and regulations involved in the development, execution, and monitoring of foreign defense sales and of arms transfer cases, the Department of State proposes to amend part 130 and related sections of the ITAR parts 122, 123, 124, and 126, to reduce the reporting burden on the regulated community by raising the threshold value to which part 130 requirements apply and the aggregate totals that require reporting, to streamline the reporting process by consolidating submissions to an annual report, and to create a more efficient system for both the regulated community and the Department by introducing a standardized form.
DATES: Comment by August 14, 2026.
2. Future Federal Register
(Source: Future Federal Register)
U.S. Customs and Border Protection; Notices; Hearings, Meetings, Proceedings, etc.: Commercial Customs Operations Advisory Committee. Scheduled Pub. Date: 16 Jun 2026. Permalink
OTHER U.S. GOVERNMENT SOURCES:
3. CBP Cargo Systems Messages
(Source: DHS/CBP/CSMS)
CSMS # 68926220 - ACE Production Extended Invasive Maintenance from 9:00 p.m. ET Saturday, June 20, 2026, to 4:00 a.m. ET Sunday, June 21, 2026
CSMS # 68927213 - Launch of CBP’s Forced Labor Enforcement Operational Guidance for Importers
4. Commerce/BIS (Nothing new.)
(Source: Commerce/BIS)
5. DoD/DCSA Announcements (Nothing new.)
6. DoD/DSCA (Nothing new.)
(Source: Defense Security Cooperation Agency)
7. OMB/OIRA BIS and DDTC Reviews (Nothing new.)
8. State/DDTC: Proposed ITAR Part 130 Changes to Reduce Reporting Burden
(Source: State/DDTC, 15 Jun 2026)
The Department published in today’s Federal Register a proposed rule to revise part 130 and related sections in parts 122, 123, 124, and 126, of the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) to modernize, streamline, and standardize reporting on certain political contributions and fees or commissions related to the sale of defense articles and defense services to or for a foreign military or international organization. The proposed revisions include:
Increasing the monetary thresholds that trigger reporting of political contributions and fees or commissions to account for inflation;
Consolidating reporting to the Department to a single annual submission, rather than on a transaction-by-transaction basis; and
Implementing an electronic submission form to reduce administrative burden and to collect and report more accurate information.
The proposed rule is in support of the policy directed in Executive Order 14268 to reduce rules and regulations involved in the development, execution, and monitoring of foreign defense sales and arms transfer cases.
Comments will be accepted until August 14, 2026.
Read the proposed rule here: 91 FR 35926. Review the proposed form here.
9. Treasury/OFAC (Nothing new.)
(Source: Treasury/OFAC)
10. UK Export Control Joint Unit (No relevant items.)
(Source: UK ECJU)
11. US Trade Representative (No new items.)
(Source: USTR Press Office)
12. White House Executive Actions (No relevant items.)
(Source: The White House)
NEWS
13. Breaking Defense: “Pentagon may ‘sacrifice’ traditional weapons to buy more drones if reconciliation fails: CTO”
(Source: Breaking Defense News, 12 Jun 2026) [Excerpts]
If Congress does not pass $350 billion in funding through the reconciliation process, the Pentagon will consider cutting expensive traditional weapon systems in order to protect drones, the department’s top technologist warned Friday.
Emil Michael, who is both the undersecretary of defense for research and engineering, as well as the Pentagon’s CTO, indicated in comments at the Hudson Institute think tank that the building was prepared to protect its focus on buying large numbers of low-cost, high-tech systems if the reconciliation funding does not come through.
“If we’re forced into that position, we just make other trade-offs, like against exquisite weapons and systems: How much of those are we willing to sacrifice in place of low-cost autonomous weapons?” Michael said. “It’s just like balancing any budget and any portfolio.”
The $350 billion package includes “a big chunk for autonomous systems, whether it be Saronic-like systems, mine-detection systems, drones, so on,” he said. “We just won’t be able to buy as much or move as fast” on what Michael has termed the “AI arsenal.” . . . [Full article]
14. Diaz: “23 States File 122 Appeal, IEEPA Refund Update, OFAC Sanctions”
(Source: Customs & International Trade Law Blog, 15 Jun 2026) [Excerpts]
Author: Jennifer Diaz, Esq., Diaz Trade Law LLP
Here is a recap of the latest customs and international trade law news:
Courts
Twenty-three non-importer states filed a notice to appeal the Court of International Trade’s (CIT) May 7 ruling against Section 122 tariffs.
The CIT held an IEEPA refund status hearing on June 9, during which CBP said that Phase 3 of the Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries (CAPE) will be ready in July, but that the agency is not authorized to process any finally liquidated entries for refunds.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
CBP announced that it plans to revoke hundreds of customs brokers’ licenses for failure to file the triennial status report and pay applicable fees.
CBP’s executive director of the trade programs directorate, Brandon Lord, filed an IEEPA refund with the CIT, stating that the Treasury Department will continue to pay refunds while the IEEPA litigation continues.
CBP issued a Harmonized System Update on June 7, containing tariff adjustments for imports of aluminum, steel, and copper into the U.S.
Ahead of the FIFA World Cup, CBP issued a reminder to travelers encouraging them to know what they can and cannot bring to the U.S. to help speed up the inspection process and help CBP protect U.S. agriculture.
CBP issued a press release highlighting how the Customs Trade Partnership Against Terrorism (CTPAT) program benefits trusted U.S. small businesses.
Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC)
As part of Economic Fury, OFAC sanctioned nine individuals and entities that have supported weapons procurement on behalf of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and Ministry of Defense and Armed Forces Logistics (MODAFL).
OFAC issued several Venezuela-related general licenses, including authorizing certain activities involving Venezuelan oil and activities involving Venezuelan-origin minerals.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
The FDA added bemotrizinol to the list of permitted sunscreen active ingredients, marking the first new active ingredient added to the over-the-counter (OTC) sunscreen monograph since the late 1990s.
New Import Alerts on the detention without physical examination of:
Human and Animal Foods imported from Foreign Suppliers by importers who are not in compliance with the requirements of the Foreign Supplier Verification Program (FSVP).
Food Products due to the presence of Salmonella.
Drugs from firms that have not met Good Manufacturing Practices (GMPs).
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
USDA’s The Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) published a notice proposing to allow imports of fresh pineapple from the Philippines and Thailand into all of the U.S. ports of entry.
Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)
The CPSC urged importers to review the CPSC’s eFiling process ahead of the mandatory eFiling deadline of July 8, 2026.
Congress
U.S. Senators Warren and Kelly sent a letter to U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer asking him to end the pause on port docking fees that were proposed as part of a Section 301 action against China’s practices in its shipbuilding and logistics sectors.
15. ECD: “Bill Aims to Increase License-Free Defense Trade Under AUKUS”
(Source: Export Compliance Daily, 15 Jun 2026) [Excerpts of subscription site.]
Sens. Pete Ricketts, R-Neb., and Tim Kaine, D-Va., introduced a bill June 8 aimed at expanding collaboration under the Australia-U.K.-U.S. (AUKUS) security partnership.
The “Unlocking Next-Generation Licensing and Opportunities for Collaborative Know-How for AUKUS Act”, or “Unlock AUKUS Act”, would extend AUKUS’ defense trade licensing exemption to such items as guided weapons, hypersonics and unmanned aircraft. . . .
16. Shapiro: “CBP Releases New Forced Labor Import Guidance: What You Need to Know”
(Source: Shap Flash, 12 Jun 2026) [Excerpts]
As CBP expands its enforcement efforts across multiple trade priorities—including the ongoing Section 301 investigations into supply chain practices and unfair trade and forced labor—importers should expect increased scrutiny of sourcing, supplier relationships, and documentation.
Strong due diligence and supply chain transparency are becoming essential not only for forced labor compliance but for broader trade compliance as well.
With that said, it is not coincidental that U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has just published a new “Forced Labor Enforcement Operational Guidance for Importers” designed to help businesses better understand how the agency identifies and stops goods made with forced labor from entering the United States. . . . [Full article]
OPINION
17. Aero News: “How One B-2 Engineer Became the Center of a Major National Security Case”
(Source: Aero News, 15 Jun 2026)
The story begins with one of the most advanced aircraft ever built and ends with a conviction that continues to echo across the aerospace and defense industries.
At the heart of the case was technology designed to help the B-2 Spirit remain nearly invisible to enemy defenses. As China sought to close a significant gap in military aviation capabilities, classified American stealth technology became a target of extraordinary interest. . . .
According to U.S. government officials, that technological gap became a key factor in an espionage case involving engineer and defense contractor Noshir S. Gowadia. A contributor to the B-2 program, Gowadia helped develop advanced exhaust technologies intended to reduce the aircraft’s infrared heat signature, making it more difficult for heat seeking missiles to detect and track.
Authorities later accused Gowadia of illegally providing classified information to foreign governments, including China. Prosecutors said he disclosed sensitive design details related to low observable exhaust systems and other defense technologies that could aid the development of advanced stealth aircraft.
Gowadia was ultimately convicted in 2010 of violating the Espionage Act and the Arms Export Control Act.
The case remains one of the most consequential examples of aerospace espionage in modern history, underscoring how a single breakthrough in aviation technology can become as strategically valuable as the aircraft it was designed to protect.
18. Akin: DoD Proposes to Expand FOCI Disclosure and Mitigation Requirements to Unclassified Contracts
(Source: Akin Alerts, 12 Jun 2026) [Excerpts]
Principal Author: Christian C. Davis, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP
On May 7, 2026, the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) published a proposed rule that would amend the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS) to add foreign ownership, control or influence (FOCI) disclosure and risk mitigation requirements (the Proposed Rule) for unclassified DoD contracts consistent with directives imposed by Congress.
If implemented, the rule would apply to unclassified DoD contracts and subcontracts with a value exceeding $5 million, requiring covered contractors and subcontractors to disclose beneficial ownership and foreign interest information and, where necessary, implement FOCI mitigation measures. . . .
If implemented as proposed, this rulemaking creates a significant new administrative burden associated with bidding on unclassified DoD contracts.
Key Takeaways
New FOCI disclosure obligations for unclassified work. . . .
NISS eligibility as a prerequisite to award. . . .
Mitigation implementation within 90 days. . . .
Subcontractor flowdown. . . .
Limited carve out for contracts for commercial products and services. . . . [Full article]
19. Export Practitioner: “U.S. AI Order Puts Anthropic at Center of Export-Control Fight”
(Source: The Export Practitioner, 15 Jun 2026) [Excerpts of paywall publication.]
The order marks a sharp escalation in U.S. AI controls, moving beyond chips and cloud access to restrict use of frontier models themselves. By forcing Anthropic to bar foreign nationals from its most powerful systems, including employees and customers inside the United States, the government is treating model capability as a controlled national-security asset.
The move could reshape AI export compliance, but it also raises immediate questions over enforceability, allied access and whether broad nationality-based limits could weaken legitimate cybersecurity research.
20. ST&R Trade Report: “Import and Export Information Collections Under Review”
(Source: Sandler, Travis & Rosenberg Trade Report, 15 Jun 2026) [Excerpts]. Contact: [email protected], 1-305-894-1035
The federal agencies listed below are accepting comments on new, revised, or extended information collections concerning the following:
Consumer Product Safety Commission – safety standard for button cell or coin batteries and consumer products containing such batteries (extension)
Department of Agriculture – foreign quarantine notices (revision and extension); importation of table eggs from regions where Newcastle disease or highly-pathogenic avian influenza is considered to exist (revision and extension); exportation of poultry and hatching eggs (revision and extension)
Food and Drug Administration – procedures for the safe processing and importing of fish and fishery products (reinstatement)
21. Financial Times: “Defence Tech Start-Up Anduril Calls for Reset of US Arms Export Controls”
(Source: Financial Times, 13 Jun 2026) [Excerpts of subscription publication]
The head of defence technology group Anduril Industries has called for a “reset” of America’s strict arms-export regime to make it easier for allied nations to produce US weapons.
Brian Schimpf, chief executive of the California-based group, which was valued at around $60bn last month, said the need for low-cost weapons manufactured at scale meant allies should be enlisted to help boost production capacity. There is an “export control reset that needs to happen” with other countries “contributing to the total supply”, Schimpf told the FT. . . .
The sale of American arms is strictly controlled by ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations), which means export deals have to be approved and sensitive technologies protected. Schimpf said the “ability to produce is probably the biggest deterrent gap that we have as a western alliance and having nations contribute into that, not just buying, but actually participating in the production of, is actually a very good thing”. By producing US-origin weapons locally, allies could then also tailor them to their own needs, he added. . . . [Full article]
TRAINING EVENTS & CONFERENCES
22. ACI Presents: “EAR Compliance & Licensing Masterclass + ITAR Week” (Virtual Series, 13 - 31 July)
(Source: Shannon Kao, ACI)
What: Practical, intermediate-level virtual program will provide you with an updated blueprint and action plan for a new era of compliance and licensing.
Where: Virtual (Series)
When: 13 - 31 July, 2026. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday Afternoons from 12-3pm Eastern
Summary: The EAR Masterclass and optional ITAR Week spans 11 learning modules and provides you with a comprehensive blueprint to upgrade your compliance program in a dynamic policy environment - delivered via our convenient, easy-to-use virtual platform.
Presenters: Speakers include Joe Valentine (Konexo), Iliyana Dwivedi (Acuity Brands), Alexandra Landis (Palladyne AI Corp.) and more.
Sponsor: American Conference Institute
Register: HERE or email Shannon Kao.
EX/IM MOVERS & SHAKERS
23. List of Export/Import Job Openings
(Source: Editor)
Submit job openings HERE.
(To view job description, click Job ID.)
RECENT:
Zygo. Job location: Middlefield, CT. Title: Trade Compliance Specialist. Job ID: 70100. Contact: James Scroggins, 860-652-2971
FULL LIST:
Analog Devices. Job locations: Germany, Munich, Otl-Aicher-Strasse. Title: Sr. Trade Compliance and Audit Officer. Job ID: LI-RW1
Amazon Web Services. Job location: Arlington, VA, New York, NY, or Seattle, WA. Title: Corporate Counsel, Global Trade Legal. Job ID: 10416214
Amazon Web Services. Job location: Vancouver, BC. Title: Bus Dev Manager, Exports. Job ID: 10428492
Anduril Industries. Job location: Costa Mesa, CA. Title: Director, International Trade Compliance. Job ID: 5100621007
Abrams Airborne Manufacturing. Job location: on-site. Title: Export Compliance Officer. Job ID: 1. Contact Cindy Valencia, 1-520-887-1727
Altimeter Solutions. Job location: Londonderry, NH. Title: Remote Export Compliance Coordinator. Job ID: JP6978
Axiom Law. Job location: U.S. Remote. Title: Export Trade Compliance Counsel
AkzoNobel. Job location: Dilovasi, Türkiye. Title: Export Sales Representative. Job ID: 51223
BAE Systems. Job location: McLean, VA. Title: Compliance Manager, International Trade Compliance. Job ID: 121716BR. Contact: Patrick Tracy
BAE Systems, Job location: Falls Church, VA. Title: VP & AGC Global Trade Compliance. Job ID: 123404BR
BAE Systems. Job location: Nashua, NH or Austin, TX (Hybrid). Title: Import Export Anst II. Job ID: 125091BR. Contact Robert Wojcik, 412-377-3351
BAE Systems. Job location: Greenlawn, NY; Fort Wayne, IN; Wayne, NJ; Reston, VA (Hybrid). Title: Principal Global Trade Compliance Analyst. Job ID: 125392BR. Contact Robert Wojcik, 412-377-3351
BAE Systems. Job location: Greenlawn, NY; Fort Wayne, IN; Wayne, NJ; Reston, VA (Hybrid). Title: Senior International Trade Analyst. Job ID: 125393BR. Contact Robert Wojcik, 412-377-3351
BAE Systems. Job location: Endicott, NY or Fort Wayne, IN (Hybrid). Title: Senior Global Trade Analyst. Job ID: 124969BR. Contact Robert Wojcik, 412-377-3351
Barnes & Thornburg. Job location: Washington, D.C. Title: International Trade Associate.
Blue Canyon Technologies. Job location: Lafayette, CO. Title: Global Trade Manager. Job ID: 977. Contact: Russell Spitz, 720-358-4237
Boeing. Job location: Wichita, KS. Title: Trade Control Specialist - Import Administration (Mid-Level or Senior). Job ID: JR2026510775.
Boeing. Job location: El Segundo, CA. Title: Global Trade Controls Specialist - Millennium Space Systems. Job ID: JR2026507643
Booz Allen Hamilton. Job location: McLean, VA (Hybrid). Title: Trade Compliance Specialist, Lead. Job ID: R0239005
CAE USA. Job location: Tampa, FL or Arlington, TX. Title: Trade Compliance Specialist. Job ID: 121906. Contact: Linda Wild, 813-505-5561
CAE USA. Job location: Tampa, FL or Arlington, TX. Title: Trade Compliance Specialist. Job ID: 122078. Contact: Linda Wild, 813-505-5561
Danaher. Job location: Bangalore, Karnātaka, India or Pune, Mahārāshtra, India. Title: Global Classification Senior Specialist. Job ID: R1307235
Excelitas Technologies. Job location: Pittsburgh, PA. Title: Senior Analyst, Global Logistics & Duty Drawback
Expeditors. Job location: Noorderlaan, Antwerpen, Belgium. Title: Customs Brokerage Agent
Export Compliance Solutions & Consulting. Job location: Remote, USA. Title: Sales Representative/Software Sales. Contact Suzanne Palmer
FedEx. Job location: East Point, GA. Title: Sr Air Export - Forwarding Agent - Dangerous Goods. Job ID: P25-301461-3
FedEx. Job location: Leça do Balio, Portugal. Title: Clearance Broker Associate with English. Job ID: RC776906
FedEx. Job location: Queensland, AU. Title: Customs Broker. Job ID: P25-249616-2
GE Aerospace, Job Locations: Evendale, OH; Lynn, MA; Norwalk, CT. Title: Lead Specialist, International Trade Compliance. Job ID: R5034989
General Atomics Aeronautical Systems. Job location: San Diego (Poway) CA (hybrid). Title: Senior Director, International Trade Compliance. Job ID: 54950BR. Contact Arthur Shulman
General Atomics. Job location: San Diego CA (hybrid) or another U.S. location including Wash DC; Huntsville, AL; Tupelo, MS; Denver, CO. Title: Senior Trade Compliance Integrator. Job ID: 52696BR. Contact James Van Eenenaam
General Dynamics. Job location: Arlington, VA. Title: F-35 JPO Export Compliance Specialist. Job ID: RQ214890
General Dynamics. Job location: Arlington, VA. Title: F-35 JPO Foreign Disclosure Support Specialist. Job ID: RQ214892
Harley-Davidson. Job location: Menomonee Falls, WI. Title: Indirect Procurement Lead - Global Logistics & Trade. Job ID: 42976.
Hillspire. Job locations: Arlington, VA; Washington, DC; New York, NY; Long Beach, CA; Los Angeles, CA; San Francisco, CA. Title: Export Control Jurisdiction and Classification Manager. Job ID: 1762. Contact: Tracy Gronewold
Hillspire. Job locations: Arlington, VA and New York, NY. Title: Trade Compliance Counsel. Job ID: 1761. Contact: Tracy Gronewold
Honeywell. Job location: Washington, DC. Title: Export Compliance General Counsel. Job ID: 143285
Honeywell. Job location: Charlotte, NC (hybrid). Title: Sr Export Compliance Officer. Job ID: 148520
IPG Photonics. Job location: Huntsville, AL. Title: ITAR Trade Compliance Specialist. Job ID 25-819. Contact: Jessica Jarmakani
L3Harris. Job location: Waterdown, Canada. Title: Sr Associate, Export Classification. Job ID: 37736
L3Harris. Job location: Waterdown, Canada. Title: Trade Exports Specialist, U.S. Licensing. Job ID: 36553
L3Harris. Job location: Waterdown, Canada. Title: Sr. Manager, Trade Compliance. Job ID: 36879
L3Harris. Job location: Ottawa, Canada. Title: Trade Compliance Senior Specialist. Job ID: 38357
Leonardo Helicopters US. Job location: Philadelphia, PA. Title: Import Manager. Job ID: 2792. Contact: Gosia Still, 215-281-1429
Mastronardi Produce. Job Location: Livonia, MI. Title: Customs Manager (Certified Customs Specialist). Job ID: CUSTO011196. Contact Tiziana Mastronardi, 519-796-7710
McCarter & English. Job locations: Newark, NJ; Stamford, CT; New York, NY. Title: Trade Specialist. Job ID: 001. Contact: Christine Lydon
Northrop Grumman. Job location: Woodland Hills, CA. Title: Manager International Trade Compliance 2. Job ID: R10218287
Northrop Grumman. Job location: Redondo Beach, CA. Title: Principal/Sr. Principal International Trade Compliance Analyst. Job ID: R10235306
Northrop Grumman. Job location: El Segundo, CA. Title: Manager International Trade Compliance 3. Job ID: R10229257
Northrop Grumman. Job location: Redondo Beach. Title: Trade Compliance Manager 2. Job ID: R10227823
Northrop Grumman. Job location: Melbourne, FL. Title: Principal/Sr. Principal International Trade Compliance Analyst. Job ID: R10220099
Ontic Engineering and Manufacturing. Job location: Chatsworth, CA. Title: Trade Compliance Specialist. Job ID: R5007. Contact: Roya Desar
Ontic. Job location: Miramar, FL. Title: ITC Specialist I. Job ID: R5731. Contact: Darrell Clack, 984-335-0784
PCC Airfoils. Job Location: On-site. Title: Facility Trade Compliance Officer. Job ID: 13286
Radiant. Job Location: Renton, VA. Title: International Operations Specialist Lead
Rolls-Royce Defense. Job location: Indianapolis, IN (+ remote). Title: Export Control Manager – Defense. Job ID: JR6154183. Contact: Laura McKinney
STENA. Job location: Baltimore, MD. Title: Global Trade Compliance Associate. Job ID: 1395. Contact: Mireya Ford, 667-442-9424
STENA. Job location: Baltimore, MD. Title: MRO Customer Program Manager
Teledyne. Job location: Chelmsford, UK. Title: Export Compliance Site Lead. Job ID: REQ34900
Teledyne. Job location: Garland, TX; Billerica, MA; Elkridge, MD. Title: Trade Compliance Director- Aerospace & Electronics Segment. Job ID: REQ33489.
Teledyne. Job location: Billerica, MA; Thousand Oaks, CA; Elkridge, MD. Title: Sr. Trade Compliance Manager, Jurisdiction and Classification (J&C). Job ID: REQ33103.
Teledyne. Job location: Grenoble, France. Title: Trade Compliance Manager. Job ID: REQ33755.
Torres Law. Job location: Dallas. Title: Trade Advisor (part-time or full-time). Contact: [email protected]
Univ. of Central Florida. Job location: Orlando, FL. Title: Export Control Manager. Job ID: R113406
Wurth Industry USA. Job locations: Greenwood, IN; Brooklyn Park, MN; Roanoke, VA; or Bondurant, IA. Title: Regulatory Compliance Officer - Export Compliance. Job ID: REGUL006337. Contact: Stephanie Johnston, 612-505-1605
Wurth Industry. Job locations: Greenwood, IN; Brooklyn Park, MN; Roanoke, VA; or Bondurant, IA. Title: Regulatory Sustainability Analyst. Job ID: REGUL006333. Contact: Stephanie Johnston, 612-505-1605
Wurth Industry USA. Job locations: Greenwood, IN; Brooklyn Park, MN; Roanoke, VA; or Bondurant, IA. Title: Trade Compliance Specialist. Job ID: TRADE006511. Contact: Stephanie Johnston, 612-505-1605
Wurth Industry USA. Job locations: Greenwood, IN; Brooklyn Park, MN; Roanoke, VA; or Bondurant, IA. Title: Logistics Specialist. Job ID: LOGIS006301. Contact: Stephanie Johnston, 612-505-1605
Wurth Industry USA. Job locations: Greenwood, IN; Brooklyn Park, MN; Roanoke, VA; Bondurant, IA. Title: Export Compliance Specialist. Job ID: EXPOR006254. Contact: Stephanie Johnston, 612-505-1605
Zurn Elkay. Job location: Downers Grove, IL. Title: Global Trade Compliance Export Manager. Job ID: 019509. Contact Anne Fuller, 414-531-6268
Zygo. Job location: Middlefield, CT. Title: Trade Compliance Specialist. Job ID: 70100. Contact: James Scroggins, 860-652-2971
EDITOR'S NOTES
24. Bartlett’s Unfamiliar Quotations
(Source: Brainy Quotes)
William McFee (William Morley Punshon McFee; 15 June 1881 – 2 July 1966; was an English writer of over fifty sea stories, including Letters from an Ocean Tramp, Harbours of Memory, and Command.)
“There is nothing like an odor to stir memories.”
Herbert A. Simon (Herbert Alexander Simon; 15 Jun 1916 – 9 Feb 2001; was an American political scientist whose work influenced the fields of computer science, economics, and cognitive psychology. He received the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1978 and the Turing Award in computer science in 1975.)
“One finds limits by pushing them.”
Mo Udall (Morris King Udall; 15 Jun 1922 – 12 Dec 1998; was an American attorney and politician who served as a U.S. representative from Arizona from 1961 to 1991. As a member of the Democratic Party, he was a leading contender for the 1976 Democratic presidential nomination, but ultimately lost to eventual president, Jimmy Carter.)
“If you can find something everyone agrees on, it’s wrong.”
25. Today in History
(Source: History Channel)
1215: King John puts his seal on Magna Carta. Following a revolt by the English nobility against his rule, King John put his royal seal on Magna Carta, or “the Great Charter,” on June 15, 1215. The document, essentially a peace treaty between John and his barons, guaranteed that the king would not be above the law. He would respect feudal rights and privileges, uphold the freedom of the church, and maintain the nation’s laws. Although more a reactionary than a progressive document in its day, Magna Carta was seen as a cornerstone in the development of democratic England by later generations.
[Editor’s Note: Your humble editor is a descendent of one of the Barons who forced King John to accept the Magna Carta.]
26. Do You Need to Update Your Daily Bugle Profile?
(Source: Editor)
Don't miss an issue of the Daily Bugle if you change your email. Click here to manage your profile.
27. Are Your Copies of Export/Import Regulations Current?
(Source: Editor)
The official versions of the following regulations are published annually in the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.) but are updated as amended in the Federal Register. The latest amendments are listed below.

19 CFR, Ch. 1, Pts. 0-199.
28 Apr 2026 (91 FR 22713): CBP Extends 19 CFR part 12 Import restrictions on Archaeological and Ethnological Material from Afghanistan.

15 CFR Subtitle B, Ch. VII, Pts. 730-774.
4 Feb 2026 (91 FR 5091): EAR amended to Remove Cambodia as a Country Group D:5 Embargoed Destination

15 CFR Part 30
11 June 2026 (91 FR 35383): Amendment to Correct Errors
(The latest Bartlett's Annotated FTR ("BAFTR") is 11 June 2026.)

DoD 5220.22-M, 32 CFR Part 117
19 Aug 2021 (86 FR 46597): Extended compliance date for reporting and approval of foreign travel under SEAD‑3 for contractors.

27 CFR Part 447: Importation of Arms, Ammunition, and Implements of War
6 May 2026 (91 FR 24352, 34348, 24362, 24364): Revised four sections in 27 CFR § 447 and 479, to refer to Commerce regulations and court cases.

22 C.F.R. Chapter I, Subchapter M, Parts 120-130
30 Dec 2025 (90 FR 61053): Amendment of §§ 126.7 and 126.18 ITAR AUKUS Exemptions.
(The latest Bartlett's Annotated ITAR ("BITAR") is 22 May 2026.)

(OFAC FACR): 31 CFR, Parts 500-599, Embargoes, Sanctions, Executive Orders
21 Mar 2025 (90 FR 13286): Increased recordkeeping requirements from 5 to 10 years.
28. Do You Have Access to the Latest and Greatest ITAR and FTR?
Bartlett's Annotated ITAR ("BITAR") (22 May 2026) and Bartlett's Annotated FTR ("BAFTR") (11 Jun 2026) are Word documents to download to your laptop to keep you updated on the latest amendments to the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (22 CFR 120-130) and the Foreign Trade Regulations (15 CFR Part 30).
They contain over a thousand footnotes of errors in the official text, section histories, key cases, practice tips, Consent Agreements, glossaries, and extensive Tables of Contents. You download the updated edition when the regs are amended, so you'll always have the latest regulations.
But if the official on-line version of the ITAR is free, why subscribe to the BITAR?"
Answer: Compare the BITAR with the Government's free version.
You'll see why all export professionals must use the BITAR and BAFTR.



