Select Committee on Defence, Foreign Affairs, International Development and Trade And Industry Third, Second, Third, Fourth Report


V PARLIAMENTARY SCRUTINY

Obstacles

  80. Several obstacles have had to be overcome in mounting even this relatively modest inquiry by four select committees meeting concurrently —

Future system

  81. It would be premature to set out how an improved system of parliamentary scrutiny might be developed in advance of a decision on its scope and in particular of a decision as to whether there should be an element of prior scrutiny of export licensing decisions. The design of the system would also be influenced by a decision on whether to continue the pattern we have established of scrutiny of the Annual Report, or to seek to instigate regular and systematic scrutiny, whether of licences granted or of those sought. There is however much to be said for a system of parliamentary scrutiny which —

For the immediate future the four Committees will continue their joint work ; we expect to examine and report on the 1999 Annual Report within the coming months. We do not however consider that the existing structure should last indefinitely , given some of the difficulties we have set out. The problems we have encountered would no doubt arise in examination of other cross-cutting issues. We note the recent Report by the Performance and Innovation Unit of the Cabinet Office on cross-cutting policies and services which concludes that the Government should be ready to agree to the appointment of cross-cutting committees and that it should welcome initiatives by Parliament to establish such committees.[155] We understand that the Liaison Committee is considering this among a range of possible improvements to the Select Committee system. We have therefore referred the question of future scrutiny of the Annual Reports on Strategic Export Controls to the Liaison Committee, and will be making our own proposals to the Committee in due course based on our experience to date.

Prior scrutiny

  82. There has been considerable discussion of the possibility of introducing some system whereby Parliament would engage in scrutiny of applications for strategic export licences before they were granted, described as "prior scrutiny". In response to the 1996 Green Paper several NGOs called for the introduction of prior scrutiny, possibly linked to a public register of applications, allowing general access and giving anybody concerned an opportunity to express a view on any licence application. The July 1998 White Paper announced the Government's decision that there should not be "parliamentary scrutiny of individual applications either before or after the decision on whether to grant a licence has been taken". No attempt has been made in the course of our inquiries to sustain the untenable proposition that Parliament should not scrutinise the decisions of the Executive. The issue of prior scrutiny however remains open.

83. Both the Trade and Industry and the Foreign Affairs Committees have already expressed their general views on prior scrutiny. The Trade and Industry Committee pronounced itself satisfied "at this stage" to "continue to leave individual decisions on export licences to Ministers, who are accountable to Parliament, in accordance with constitutional conventions". It noted that it would be unusual for casework of this sort to be seen in advance by Parliament; that there was a danger that Parliament could be presented as having tacitly endorsed an application laid before it and not commented upon; and that "on the sort of hard cases referred to in oral evidence to us we doubt if it would be helpful to have a formal parliamentary input prior to decisions".[156] In its Report the Foreign Affairs Committee set out further arguments against prior scrutiny, in particular the potential adverse effect on the UK defence industry, but also noted that the system in operation in the USA did not appear to have damaged the ability of companies there to export.[157] In evidence to us in November 1999, the Foreign Secretary sought to discourage any system of prior clearance on the grounds that it would introduce a very substantial delay into the licensing process which was already failing to meet its turnaround targets without the added complication of delay.[158] Saferworld provided in response to our request a detailed account of the system of prior scrutiny in operation in Sweden, already referred to in earlier evidence to the Trade and Industry Committee. BASIC provided details of the system of US congressional scrutiny of licence applications above a certain value. In its November 1999 submission, the DMA set out its concerns at the prospect of prior scrutiny.[159]

84. We decided to inquire at first-hand into the Swedish system of parliamentary scrutiny. An edited version of the note prepared following the visit is published as an Annex to this Report. Our visit to Sweden suggested that the system in operation there could not readily be translated into a UK parliamentary context. The Swedish Export Control Council is an advisory body, composed of serving or former parliamentarians representing the political parties, established to provide the independent official responsible for export licensing (the Inspector-General of Strategic Products) with a political sounding-board, and to create a private forum where all-party consensus can be reached on delicate issues. Only a limited number of requests from exporters for pre-licensing opinions ( the equivalent of the Form 680 procedure in the UK) are referred to the Council, at the discretion of the Inspector-General; he will in many cases have already given his opinion. Council members express individual views on the opinion the Inspector-General should give on those cases he has referred to it. The Inspector-General then comes to a view. Major decisions are remitted to the collective decision of Ministers. The Council does not report to Parliament, and is not a parliamentary body. There are other conventional mechanisms for parliamentary scrutiny. Parliamentary committees can and do scrutinise an Annual Report not dissimilar to the UK Report, and individual Members can pursue particular issues by question and debate. While the system has several strengths, our analysis of it strongly suggests that the lessons that can be drawn from it for the UK are circumscribed by the extent to which it is the product of a different historical and constitutional context. We intend to seek further details of the practical operation of the US system.

85. The case for parliamentary prior scrutiny of applications for strategic export licences stands or falls on a judgement as to whether licences for arms exports are, for whatever reason, deemed to be a sufficiently distinct category of Ministerial decision as to justify reversal of the normal constitutional pattern, whereby Ministers make decisions on "casework" and are accountable for their decisions after they are made. If that is indeed the case — and there are many who see strong arguments in favour — then we are satisfied that it is well within the grasp of human ingenuity to devise a satisfactory system of prior scrutiny. Our examination of some of the practical objections made suggests that some are more imagined than real. There are however some serious challenges; the demands that any worthwhile system of prior scrutiny would put on those involved cannot be lightly dismissed. There are a number of fundamental issues of parliamentary practice and procedure which will have to be faced. We expect to gain some further insight from a greater understanding of the practicalities of the system of prior scrutiny in the USA. At this stage we would not want to rule out either the practicality or the possible desirability of prior parliamentary scrutiny of export licence applications. We will seek to come to conclusions on this issue in our next Report.


155  Wiring It Up, January 2000, page 56, Conclusions 28 and 29 Back

156  HC 65, para 20 Back

157  HC 100, para 148 Back

158  Qq 83, 87 Back

159  Ev, pp 53-6; pp 25-33; pp 65-6 Back


 
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Prepared 11 February 2000