Serious Rights Violation Ongoing

America First Arms Transfer Strategy: Human Rights Safeguards Removed From Weapons Exports

An executive order stripped human rights safeguards from the US arms transfer framework, replacing decades of bipartisan policy with a commerce-first approach. The subsequent emergency bypass of congressional review for $23+ billion in Gulf arms sales demonstrated the immediate consequences of removing these guardrails.

What Happened

On February 6, 2026, President Trump signed Executive Order 14383, "Establishing an America First Arms Transfer Strategy," which fundamentally restructured the framework governing US weapons exports — the largest in the world. The order elevated commercial and economic objectives to the top of the priority hierarchy for arms transfer decisions, displacing the strategic, human rights, and humanitarian considerations that had occupied that position under all previous administrations of both parties.

What Changed

The executive order makes no mention of human rights, international humanitarian law, or civilian protection. This is unprecedented. Even Trump's own 2018 Conventional Arms Transfer Policy retained language about foreign policy considerations, including human rights. Biden's 2023 policy had gone further, committing the US to refrain from transferring arms that were "more likely than not" to contribute to genocide, crimes against humanity, or serious violations of international humanitarian law.

The Stimson Center, a nonpartisan security think tank, analyzed the order and found that it "fundamentally reordered CAT policy priorities, giving primacy to domestic economic and industrial objectives at the expense of the strategic focus that had been at the center of all past directives." In practice, this means arms sales will be evaluated primarily on their economic benefit to the US, with little or no weight given to whether the recipient is likely to use the weapons to commit atrocities.

The $23 Billion Emergency Bypass

The consequences of the new framework were demonstrated almost immediately. On March 19, 2026, Secretary of State Marco Rubio invoked emergency powers under Section 36(b) of the Arms Export Control Act to force through more than $23 billion in weapons sales to Gulf states — bypassing the congressional review process that exists specifically to scrutinize whether proposed arms sales comply with human rights standards and serve US strategic interests.

The packages included:

  • UAE: $8.4 billion — THAAD radar ($4.5B), counter-drone systems ($2.1B), air-to-air missiles ($1.22B), F-16 munitions ($644M)
  • Kuwait: $8 billion — air and missile defense sensor radars
  • Jordan: Additional air defense systems
  • UAE (non-public): $7 billion in additional weapons approved through channels not requiring public disclosure

The use of emergency powers to bypass congressional review for $23+ billion in arms sales — combined with $7 billion routed through non-public channels — represents a fundamental erosion of democratic oversight over US weapons exports.

Arms Trade Treaty: While the US signed but did not ratify the ATT, Article 7 requires exporting states to assess the potential that arms could be used to commit or facilitate serious violations of international humanitarian law or human rights law. The removal of human rights considerations from the US transfer framework contradicts the treaty's core purpose.

Geneva Conventions Common Article 1: All High Contracting Parties — including the US — undertake to "respect and to ensure respect" for the Conventions. This has been interpreted to include a duty of due diligence in arms transfers — ensuring that weapons are not provided to forces likely to violate IHL. The elimination of human rights safeguards undermines this obligation.

State responsibility for aiding violations: Under the International Law Commission's Articles on State Responsibility, a state that aids or assists another state in the commission of an internationally wrongful act is internationally responsible if it does so with knowledge of the circumstances. Removing the mechanisms designed to assess these risks does not eliminate responsibility — it may actually increase it, by demonstrating deliberate indifference.

Why This Is Classified Severe

This incident receives a severe severity classification because:

  • Systematic removal of safeguards: The executive order eliminates human rights considerations from the world's largest arms exporter's transfer framework — not a one-time decision but a structural change affecting all future sales.
  • Immediate consequences: The $23B+ emergency bypass demonstrated the framework's real-world impact within weeks of implementation.
  • Democratic oversight erosion: Bypassing congressional review for billions in arms sales, including $7B through non-public channels, undermines the checks designed to prevent complicity in atrocities.
  • Historical rupture: No previous administration of either party had removed human rights from the arms transfer framework entirely.
  • Enabling future harm: The policy enables unlimited arms sales to any recipient regardless of their human rights record, creating the conditions for future complicity in atrocities.

International Law Violations

The following international law provisions are implicated:

  1. Arms Trade Treaty Article 7 (Risk Assessment): The removal of human rights risk assessment contradicts the ATT's core requirement for exporting states.
  2. ATT Article 6 (Prohibition on Facilitating War Crimes): Eliminating mechanisms to screen arms sales for war crime risk increases the likelihood of facilitating violations.
  3. Geneva Conventions Common Article 1 (Ensure Respect): The duty to ensure IHL compliance includes due diligence in arms transfers — which the new framework abandons.
  4. IHL Duty of Due Diligence: States have an obligation to take reasonable steps to ensure their arms do not facilitate IHL violations.
  5. ILC Articles Article 16 (Aid or Assistance): Removing safeguards while continuing large-scale arms sales demonstrates the kind of deliberate indifference that can give rise to state responsibility.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. Biden establishes human-rights-centered arms policy

    President Biden signs a policy committing the US to refrain from transferring arms that are 'more likely than not' to contribute to genocide, crimes against humanity, or serious violations of international humanitarian law — the strongest human rights standard in US arms transfer policy history.

  2. Trump reinstates 2018 CAT policy, rescinds Biden's

    Upon returning to office, the Trump administration rescinds Biden's 2023 arms transfer policy and reinstates the 2018 Conventional Arms Transfer Policy, which placed less emphasis on human rights considerations.

  3. Executive Order 14383 signed

    President Trump signs 'Establishing an America First Arms Transfer Strategy,' which reorders US arms export priorities to elevate commercial and economic objectives. The order makes no mention of human rights, international humanitarian law, or civilian protection.

  4. EO published in Federal Register

    Executive Order 14383 is published in the Federal Register, making its provisions official and establishing the new framework for all US arms transfer decisions.

  5. Rubio invokes emergency powers for $23B+ Gulf arms sales

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio declares an emergency requiring immediate approval of arms transfers to Gulf partners, bypassing congressional review for over $23 billion in weapons sales to the UAE ($8.4B), Kuwait ($8B), and Jordan, plus $7B to the UAE through non-public channels.

Sources

  1. Establishing an America First Arms Transfer Strategy — White House archived ✓
  2. The 'America First Arms Transfer Strategy' Reorders US Arms Transfer Priorities — Stimson Center archived ✓
  3. Establishing an America First Arms Transfer Strategy — Federal Register archived ✓
  4. Trump invokes emergency powers with $23 billion in Gulf arms sales — CNBC archived ✓
  5. Understanding the Evolution and Emerging Volatility of US Arms Transfer Policies — Stimson Center archived ✓
  6. Arms Control Association analysis of arms transfer policy changes — Arms Control Association archived ✓

Verification

Publication provenance

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