The Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) was established in April 1987 by the
G7 countries:
Canada,
France,
Germany,
Italy,
Japan, the
United Kingdom, and the
United States. It was created to curb the spread of unmanned delivery systems for
nuclear weapons, specifically systems which can carry a payload of for . The MTCR applies to exports to members and non-members. At the annual meeting in
Oslo from 29 June to 2 July 1992, chaired by
Sten Lundbo, it was agreed to expand the MTCR's scope to include nonproliferation of
unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for
weapons of mass destruction. Prohibited materials are divided into two categories, which are outlined in the MTCR Equipment, Software, and Technology Annex. Thirty-five nations are members, with India joining on 27 June 2016. According to the
Arms Control Association, the MTCR has been successful in helping to slow (or stop) several
ballistic missile programs: "Argentina, Egypt, and Iraq abandoned their joint
Condor II ballistic missile program. Brazil and South Africa also shelved or eliminated missile or space launch vehicle programs. Some former Warsaw Pact countries, such as Poland and the Czech Republic, destroyed their ballistic missiles, in part, to better their chances of joining MTCR." In October 1994, the MTCR member states established a "no undercut" policy: if one member denies the sale of technology to another country, all members must do likewise. China originally viewed the MTCR as a discriminatory measure by Western governments, which sold sophisticated military aircraft while restricting sales of competing ballistic missiles. The Missiles and Missile-related Items and Technologies Export Control List, a formal regulation, was issued in August 2002. The following year, the MTCR chair invited China to participate. Israel, Romania and Slovakia have agreed to follow MTCR export rules, although they are not yet members. The regime has its limitations; member countries have been known to clandestinely violate the rules. Some of these countries, with varying degrees of foreign assistance, have deployed
medium-range ballistic missiles which can travel more than and are researching missiles with greater ranges; Israel and China have deployed strategic nuclear
SLCMs, ICBMs and satellite-launch systems. Countries which are not MTCR members buy and sell on the global arms market; North Korea is currently viewed as the primary source of ballistic-missile proliferation in the world, and China has supplied ballistic missiles and technology to Pakistan. China supplied
DF-3A IRBMs to Saudi Arabia in 1988 before it informally agreed to follow MTCR guidelines. Israel cannot export its
Shavit space-launch system due to its non-member MTCR status, although the
Clinton administration allowed an import waiver for US companies to buy the Shavit in 1994. Over 20 countries have ballistic missile systems. The
International Code of Conduct against Ballistic Missile Proliferation (ICOC), also known as the Hague Code of Conduct, was established in 2002. The code, which calls for restraint and care in the proliferation of ballistic missile systems capable of delivering weapons of mass destruction, has 119 members. Its mission is similar to the MTCR's, an export group. India applied for membership in June 2015 with support from Russia, France and the United States, and became a member on 27 June 2016.
Pakistan is not a member of the MTCR. Although it has expressed a desire to join the group, it has not submitted an application. The Pakistani government has pledged to adhere to MTCR guidelines, and analysts believe that the country is doing so. However, they haven't provided any evidence in support of the same. In 2020, the U.S. government announced that it would reinterpret its implementation of the MTCR to expedite sales of
unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to other countries. The revised U.S. policy will reinterpret how the MTCR applies to drones which travel at speeds under , such as the
Predator and
Reaper drones (made by
General Atomics) and the
Global Hawk drone (made by
Northrop Grumman). ==Members==