Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05AMMAN1147
2005-02-09 15:31:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Amman
Cable title:  

UPDATE ON U.S.-JORDAN FREE TRADE AGREEMENT JOINT

Tags:  ETRD SENV CVIS PREL EAGR KTIA JO 
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UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 AMMAN 001147 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

STATE FOR NEA/LEA
STATE ALSO FOR OES AND FOR CA/VO/F/P - M. MCEVOY
STATE PASS TO USTR

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ETRD SENV CVIS PREL EAGR KTIA JO
SUBJECT: UPDATE ON U.S.-JORDAN FREE TRADE AGREEMENT JOINT
COMMITTEE FOLLOW-UP

SENSITIVE BUT UNCLASSIFIED. FOR USG USE ONLY.

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 AMMAN 001147

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

STATE FOR NEA/LEA
STATE ALSO FOR OES AND FOR CA/VO/F/P - M. MCEVOY
STATE PASS TO USTR

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ETRD SENV CVIS PREL EAGR KTIA JO
SUBJECT: UPDATE ON U.S.-JORDAN FREE TRADE AGREEMENT JOINT
COMMITTEE FOLLOW-UP

SENSITIVE BUT UNCLASSIFIED. FOR USG USE ONLY.


1. (U) This is an action request. Please see paras 5 and 14.


2. (SBU) SUMMARY: Since USTR hosted Jordan at the annual
Free Trade Agreement (FTA) Joint Committee (JC) meeting last
June, steady progress has been made on the twelve action
items raised. Five action items are completed, from the
mounting of a Joint Environmental Forum, to U.S. approval of
eight percent Israeli content in QIZ products, to Jordan's
lifting of a ban on poultry from the United States. On the
remaining JC action items:

-- Jordan continues to stress its strong interest in
accelerated tariff reductions under the FTA.

-- Post is pressing the GOJ to lift its ban on U.S.-origin
beef.

-- Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT) officials are
distributing for public comment a concept paper on Rules of
Origin and accumulation of content; they plan to submit it to
USTR to support combined-content manufactures with other U.S.
FTA partners.

-- GOJ trade officials continue to pursue lengthening E1/E2
treaty trader/investor visas to five years.

-- Three JC issues regarding Government Procurement and
investment promotion require first actions by Jordan before
the U.S. can engage.

Post will continue to report separately on the potential
significant barrier to trade raised by Jordan's DAMAN product
conformity/pre-shipment inspection program. Embassy will
send septel its recommendations on accelerated tariff
reductions and other measures to enhance bilateral trade.
King Abdullah has raised with A/S Burns and with Charge his
interest in accelerated tariff reduction under the FTA and
several QIZ issues, outlined in a recent letter from MOIT
Minister Hindawi, in order to ensure that Jordan maintains
its competitive edge. END SUMMARY.

Accelerated Tariff Reductions
--------------


3. (SBU) MOIT Minister Ahmed Hindawi on February 7 sent a
letter addressed to the Charge emphasizing the importance of
the tariffs reduction request for our bilateral economic

relations (the request was first made at the JC). Although
more than 80 percent of all bilateral tariffs have already
been reduced to zero reciprocally under the FTA, some of the
potentially highest-earning export items (especially
garments) still carry high tariffs under the FTA and will do
so until 2010. These garments are now exported under the
special Qualifying Industrial Zone (QIZ) arrangement with
Israel, whereby products with eight percent Israeli content
enter the U.S. duty free. The GOJ wants to give all of
Jordan's garment factories a chance for duty-free access to
the U.S. market, not just the QIZ factories. Post will fax
NEA/ELA a copy of Minister Hindawi's letter, along with
post's updated checklist of FTA JC action items.


4. (SBU) We understand that USTR is handling formal
consultations on the proposed accelerated tariff reductions.


5. (SBU) ACTION REQUEST: Post would appreciate any update
that may be available on the status of this request.

Rules of Origin Concept Paper
--------------


6. (SBU) Jordan has stated an interest in discussing rules
of origin under the FTA Article 16, which stated the two
sides would "enter into discussions" on developing
interpretive and explanatory materials of those rules. Rules
of origin (ROO) define what makes a product a "new or
different article of commerce" from Jordan (versus, say a
slightly altered product from China which a manufacturer is
trying to re-export under the much more favorable FTA rules).
These essential rules of free trade can enhance already
existing comparative trade advantages. USTR has stated its
clear intention to engage on ROO but has been waiting for the
GOJ's promised concept paper. As the GOJ Ministry of Trade
has been preoccupied with regional trade agreements, a
Singapore FTA, and upgrading its bilateral trade agreement
with Israel, it asked USAID, through its AMIR technical
assistance program, to produce a draft technical report. The
draft technical report on FTA ROO options was recently
completed and the MOIT will use it as a basis for collecting
public comments, before preparing a final GOJ concept paper.
An MOIT senior official told us that the concept paper should
be presented to the USG in March.


7. (SBU) An important dimension of the bilateral ROO
discussion will be the accumulation of content across borders
as it pertains to the 35 percent domestic content requirement
of the FTA. For example, the FTA Rules of Origin (in Annex
2.2) allow manufacturers to apply up to 15 percent U.S.
content toward the 35 percent "domestic" content requirement,
meaning a Jordanian firm could use American components for an
electronic good and then would need only to produce in Jordan
20 percent value added (as defined by ROO on "substantial
transformation" into a new product). A clause in the Jordan
FTA ROO uniquely allows for discussion of accumulation of
content from a "territory contiguous to Jordan" toward the
required 35 percent "domestic" content. Since the WTO rules
require that all of the countries involved in such
accumulation of content have bilateral FTA's, for now only
Israel could be considered a partner country of origin for
the 35 percent content requirement.


8. (SBU) GOJ officials would like also to extend the
discussion on accumulation of content to include other FTA
countries in the region, such as Morocco and Bahrain
(assuming the latter FTA will be ratified and enter into
force). GOJ officials were encouraged by public remarks made
by USG trade officials on expanding the bilateral FTAs in the
region into a Middle East Free Trade Area (MEFTA),a central
feature of which would be such accumulation of content.
Finally, although warned last June by A/USTR Novelli that
USTR would prefer to limit such discussions to the Middle
East, GOJ officials will likely try again to talk about
accumulation with other nations with which we both have
FTA's, particularly Singapore. A section on Singapore is in
the concept paper in its current draft form.

E1/E2 Visas
--------------


9. (SBU) A senior MOIT trade policy official told us that
the MOIT is discussing with the GOJ Foreign Ministry the
current status of E1/E2 treaty trader/investor visas, which
were provided for in the FTA and are being made available at
the Embassy. The Jordanians plan to discuss with other
(especially security) agencies loosening the current
limitation on validity of the Jordanian equivalent of the
E1/E2 visa, now just one year. Their goal in these internal
discussions is to arrange to lengthen Jordanian
E1/E2-equivalent validity to five years, so that Jordan and
the U.S. could then discuss reciprocally issuing
multiple-entry E1/E2 visas of five years duration, versus the
current single-entry, three-month visa. For now, all action
on this issue is with the GOJ. MOIT officials understand
that they could now request discussions on a multiple-entry,
12-month visa if they so chose, but so far have indicated
their preference to investigate the five-year option first.
It is possible that Amman officials and Jordan's Washington
embassy are not fully coordinating on this issue.

Other JC Issues
--------------


10. (SBU) The GOJ ban on beef was imposed after the
late-2003 report by USDA of a presumptive case of bovine
spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in a Holstein cow in
Washington state. Embassy Amman, working with the regional
USDA attache in Cairo, continues to make the case that BSE is
contained in the U.S. and that U.S. beef is safe to eat. The
latest USG non-paper on BSE is reportedly currently being
reviewed in the Ministry of Agriculture and a decision on the
ban may be imminent. The Ministry of Agriculture lifted the
ban on U.S. poultry late in 2004. In addition to the holding
of the Joint Environmental Forum and the USTR decision
approving 8 percent Israeli content in QIZ's, Jordan last
year finally approved regulations on "sell by" dates on food
packaging consistent with WTO standards. On an IPR issue
raised at the JC, Jordan last August sent a letter stating it
would continue to seek an exception to the Berne Convention
regarding translation and reproduction on what it called
"proper use" cases (such as xeroxing of excerpts from
copyrighted materials for university classes).


11. (SBU) A few issues raised at the JC remain with the
Jordanians. On the Government Procurement Agreement, Jordan
continues to contemplate a bilateral GPA, but remains
hesitant until the WTO plurilateral GPA negotiations are
completed. At the JC, Jordan had also raised possibly
changing our Bilateral Investment Treaty so as to refer to
the FTA and reflect a more open investment climate than was
in place when the FTA was first negotiated. Finally, Jordan
had suggested a two-way investment promotion board but has
not provided particulars. We continue to reiterate USTR's
position that the USG stands ready to engage on these issues
when the GOJ is ready.

More on QIZ's
--------------


12. (SBU) MOIT Minister Hindawi's February letter also
raised two new issues regarding the Qualifying Industrial
Zones that require attention. First, Hindawi noted that the
Israel-Egyptian QIZ administrative rules were "more
favorable" than those for Jordan and Israel. Although the
QIZ Product Approval Procedures on which Hindawi based his
assessment were sourced from an Egyptian newspaper, it does
appear that the Egyptian system is more streamlined: it is
post facto and bases QIZ factory approvals on quarterly data,
whereas in Jordan a product rather than a factory must be
reviewed based on detailed product specifications and raw
input purchase data that all must be pre-approved. It is our
understanding that the Israelis want to experiment with this
new system, but the Jordanians see it as a "competitive
advantage" and they request similar QIZ product approval
procedures. Secondly, Hindawi proposed essentially a
quadrilateral QIZ, with Jordan, Egypt, and Israel together
accumulating QIZ product content for duty-free export to the
U.S. Hindawi stated this step would encourage regional
economic cooperation.


13. (SBU) COMMENT: King Abdullah has raised with A/S
Burns and Charge the points made in Hindawi,s letter, in
general terms but with a clear intent to speed bilateral
engagement on issues he regards as important to keep Jordan
competitive. Post will send septel recommendations on
accelerating tariff reductions under the FTA and otherwise
enhancing trade relations. Under former MOIT Minister
Halaiqa, who was double-hatted as DPM and hampered by
political considerations, these JC issues were not being
handled with speed or alacrity. Now with Hindawi at the
helm, FTA JC issues may move at a brisker pace. Nonetheless,
Hindawi lost by promotion his best and brightest trade
negotiator responsible for overseeing complex issues such as
rules of origin. Post would like to see the discussion on
"contiguous territories" start as soon after the USG receives
the ROO concept paper as possible, and is working with
Embassy Tel Aviv to recommend possible new approaches to
Jordan-Israel trade under the FTA. Concerning Hindawi's
point about QIZ product approvals, the perception of unequal
treatment is of concern to us. We ask that Washington
consider options for providing Jordan a similar arrangement
on QIZ product approvals. Hindawi's second point on
three-way accumulation of content would require further
amendment of the United States-Israel Free Trade
Implementation Act of 1985, as amended. We pass it along for
consideration by concerned Washington agencies.


14. (SBU) ACTION REQUESTED: Post requests guidance on
responding to the two GOJ requests contained in MOIT Minister
Hindawi's letter.
HALE