ARTICLE
11 May 2026

State Department Terminates ITAR Arms Embargo On Ethiopia

AP
Arnold & Porter

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The U.S. Department of State's Directorate of Defense Trade Controls has announced a significant shift in policy regarding arms exports to Ethiopia, ending a multi-year embargo that was imposed during the Tigray conflict. This policy change allows for case-by-case review of licensing applications for defense articles and services previously denied under ITAR Section 126.1. What implications does this reversal hold for defense contractors and U.S.-Ethiopia relations moving forward?
United States Government, Public Sector

On May 11, 2026, the U.S. Department of State’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) issued a licensing policy change terminating the U.S. arms embargo on Ethiopia. Ethiopia currently is included on the International Traffic in Arms Regulations’ (ITAR) Section 126.1 list, which establishes a general policy denying license requests for any exports or reexports of defense articles and services to certain countries and more limited export restrictions on other countries, such as Ethiopia. The ITAR’s Ethiopia embargo barred licenses for exports of defense articles and services destined for Ethiopia’s military, security, and intelligence entities. DDTC’s announcement functionally revokes this denial policy. DDTC further indicated that it is now reviewing all Ethiopia licensing applications for ITAR-controlled activities on a case-by-case basis.

The State Department formally added Ethiopia to ITAR’s Section 126.1 list in November 2021 following the outbreak of violent conflict and humanitarian crisis in Ethiopia’s Tigray region. At the time, the State Department cited its concerns about “the ongoing crisis in northern Ethiopia as well as other threats to the sovereignty, national unity, and territorial integrity of Ethiopia”, as well as the Ethiopian and Eritrean militaries’ denial of civilian access to humanitarian relief. DDTC likely will issue a formal rule in the near future removing Ethiopia from the Section 126.1 list.

Arnold & Porter will continue to monitor developments in this area.

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