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9/13/2023

Testimony of Assistant Secretary for Investment Security Paul Rosen Before the Committee on Financial Services, U.S.…

Testimony of Assistant Secretary for Investment Security Paul
Rosen Before the Committee on Financial Services, U.S. House
September 12, 2023

As Prepared for Delivery
Good morning, Chairman McHenry, Ranking Member Waters, and Members of the Committee.
Thank you for the opportunity to provide an update on the work of the Committee on Foreign
Investment in the United States, or CFIUS.
CFIUS is a critical national security tool that enables thoroughreviews of foreign investments
in the United States for national security risks. CFIUS, or the Committee, is comprised of the
heads of nine Executive Branch departments and o ices—such as the Department of Defense
and the Department of Commerce—with additional departments and o ices playing defined
roles or otherwise involved as observers. The Secretary of the Treasury is the Chair of the
Committee, and I help lead and execute the Treasury Secretaryʼs role as the Chair. When
necessary, the Committee takes action to address national security risks, while maintaining an
open investment environment and the status of the United States as the worldʼs top
destination for foreign direct investment.
CFIUS protects national security by reviewing covered foreign direct investment from any
country. By law, the Committee analyzes the facts and circumstances of each transaction on a
case-by-case basis, following a rigorous review process that leverages subject-matter
expertise across the Executive Branch. Our risk analysis is focused on three factors: the
potential threat emanating from the foreign investor, the national security vulnerabilities
presented by the U.S. business, and the consequence of the transaction to national security.
For example, if, during our risk analysis, we were to learn that an investor with ties to a hostile
foreign actor was going to gain a controlling stake in a critical U.S. Government contractor,
the Committee would almost certainly conclude that the transaction presents a risk to
national security. When we identify risks to national security, our mandate is to resolve them,
whether by mitigating the risk through enforceable restrictions on the parties or, as a last
resort, by recommending the President block or unwind a transaction. At the same time, per
our Congressional mandate, CFIUS does not implement blanket country- or sector-specific
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Testimony of Assistant Secretary for Investment Security Paul Rosen Before the Committee on Financial Services, U.S.…

prohibitions. Our case-by-case reviews are very e ective ; they a ord us insight into, and the
ability to addressthrough a variety of tools, activities of concern undertaken by foreign
investors.
Over the years, as the national security threat environment has evolved, so has CFIUS. First
established by executive order in 1975, the Committee has benefited from congressional
action to codify and enhance its authorities. Most recently, Congress did so with the
bipartisan Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act of 2018, or FIRRMA. Among
other things, FIRRMA provided the Committee with important authorities over certain
investment structures—such as certain non-controlling but non-passive investments in
sectors of particular importance—which had previously fallen outside its jurisdiction. FIRRMA
also strengthened our processes to better enable timely and e ective reviews of transactions
within our jurisdiction. It also provided the Committee with much needed jurisdiction over
certain transactions involving real estate in close proximity to sensitive facilities, such as
military bases.
Treasury—and the Committee at large— has dedicated significant time and resources to the
successful implementation of FIRRMA and the e icient processing of a caseload that is at an
all-time high. Prior to enactment, the Committee processed 237 transaction filings in 2017.
Five years later, our caseload hasnearly doubled to 440 transaction filings in 2022.
To address this increased volume—and the increased complexity of the transactions we
review—CFIUS prioritizes e ective and e icient use of our available resources, consistent with
ournational security mission. We have dedicated professionals focused on the following:
Reviewing cases and engaging with transaction parties, or companies, who file with
CFIUS;
Monitoring partiesʼ compliance with agreements to mitigate national security risk;
Pursuing enforcement actions where appropriate;
Identifying and pursuing transactions subject to CFIUS jurisdiction that were not
voluntarily notified but may raise national security considerations;
Engaging with foreign allies and partners on best practices for investment reviews and
supporting the development of similar national security-based investment screening
regimes around the world;
Ensuring our policies, practices, and regulations stay current and responsive to the risks
that arise in transactions; and
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Testimony of Assistant Secretary for Investment Security Paul Rosen Before the Committee on Financial Services, U.S.…

Engaging with and educating stakeholders, including the business community, as to the
technology sectors and other sectors of importance to national security.
We appreciate the continued bipartisan congressional support forour mission. This support
has enabled our o ice to continue growing across all functions, to meet the full scope of
FIRRMAʼs mandate.
Since I was confirmed to my role as Assistant Secretary for Investment Security, I have sought
to ensure that CFIUS is marshaling all available resources and tools to support our important
national security mission. Among our achievements is the recent Executive Order that, for the
first time since CFIUS was established, provided Presidential guidance on specific risks, such
as supply chain resilience and security, aggregate investment trends, and sensitive data,
which the Committee is to consider when reviewing covered transactions. Treasury has also
recently issued CFIUSʼs first ever enforcement and penalty guidelines. The guidelines will help
ensure that transaction parties understand the Committeeʼs considerations and are held
accountable for failing to comply with our laws, or for not upholding their obligations to
mitigate national security risk or otherwise comply with our regulations.
When CFIUS reviews a transaction that raises national security concerns, the Committee can
mitigate the risk by requiring that certain measures be taken, and these measures are
typicallyformalized with the parties in what we call a National Security Agreement, or
mitigation agreement. For instance, a mitigation agreement might require a party to obtain
the Committeeʼs approval for new vendors who would have access to company data. When we
negotiate a mitigation agreement, our work does not stop a er the agreement is signed—
and neither does the partiesʼ.
In monitoring compliance with mitigation measures, we routinely conduct site visits, collect
documents and information, and engage with third-party monitors and auditors to ensure
that the terms of these agreements are upheld and that parties live up to their compliance
obligations. While preventing violations from occurring is our primary focus, the availability of
robust remediation and enforcement tools in the event of non-compliance is necessary
because a breach could harm national security. Under the Defense Production Act, CFIUS has
its own enforcement authority—including subpoena authority—and can impose monetary
penalties and seek other remedies for violations of its statute, regulations, mitigation orders,
conditions, or agreements. We have and will continue to take enforcement action when
necessary to protect national security.

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Testimony of Assistant Secretary for Investment Security Paul Rosen Before the Committee on Financial Services, U.S.…

Since FIRRMAʼs implementation, CFIUS has also increased e orts to engage a broad range of
stakeholders, thereby increasing awareness of our mission. We work closely and regularly with
our international allies and partners to explain our process and to provide technical assistance
as these countries develop, enhance, or modernize their own national security-based
investment review mechanisms. At the same time, we also engage with industry and other
stakeholders regarding our process and the national security risk factors we examine. We also
held our first CFIUS conference last year, convening stakeholders from across the Committee
and the private sector, and will do so again tomorrow.
Finally, as we protect national security in the context of inbound investments, Treasury is also
focused on the potential national security implications of outbound U.S. investments.
Pursuant to Executive Order 14105, the O ice of Investment Security will implement a new
program, that, in accordance with forthcoming regulations, would require U.S. persons to
notify Treasury ofcertain transactions or prohibit U.S. persons from undertaking certain other
transactions in countries of concern in the areas of semiconductors and microelectronics,
quantum information technologies, and certain artificial intelligence systems. Thisprogram
will be administered separately from CFIUS. Since the rollout of the E.O. last month, we have
begun to gather inputfrom various stakeholders as part of a public notice and comment
administrative rulemaking process. We believe that that E.O. can be complementary to action
by Congress to build an outbound investment program and we look forward to sustaining our
close engagement with this Committee, as well as others, towards that important end.
While we are proud of the Committeeʼs e ort to protect national security, our work remains
unfinished, and there are always ways to improve. We remain focused on being as e ective as
we can be in our mission, and we look forward to continuing to work with Congress in this
regard. You have my commitment that we will use every available authority to protect the
national security of the United States.
Thank you again for the opportunity to appear before you today.
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