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THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release March 17, 2000
STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT
Today I have signed into law S. 376, the "Open-market
Reorganization for the Betterment of International Telecommunications
Act." S. 376 amends the Communications Satellite Act of 1962 to
establish a statutory framework for the privatization of the
International Telecommunications Satellite Organization (INTELSAT) and
the International Mobile Satellite Organization (Inmarsat).
In partnership with the Congress, my Administration has worked
aggressively over the last 6 years to promote the pro-competitive
privatization of these intergovernmental satellite organizations. As a
result of our efforts and changing commercial conditions, in 1995,
Inmarsat spun off new business activities into a private United Kingdom
(U.K.) corporation, ICO Global Communications Ltd., and, in 1999,
Inmarsat privatized its remaining business activities as a U.K.
corporation. In 1998, INTELSAT spun off five satellites into a private
Netherlands corporation, New Skies Satellites, N.V. And last October,
INTELSAT's 143 member governments agreed to fully privatize by early
2001.
My Administration's goal is to ensure that a privatized INTELSAT
will compete fairly and fully with other international
telecommunications companies, thus benefiting consumers through greater
innovation, lower prices, and more service options. Fair competition
requires a level playing field; INTELSAT must not retain advantages that
result from its former inter-governmental status or that are unavailable
to other satellite competitors, including any preferential access to
orbital slots or foreign markets. But neither should INTELSAT (or the
already privatized Inmarsat and New Skies) have to face barriers to the
U.S. market erected by competitors who want to limit competition here.
Full competition means that INTELSAT should be privatized in a way that
allows it to provide the full range of telecom-munications services,
including value-added services to end users, as well as wholesale
satellite capacity to communications providers (its current role). That
means allowing INTELSAT to compete robustly against all other service
providers in this rapidly growing industry.
My Administration intends to pursue INTELSAT's privatization in a
manner that is compatible with this Nation's international obligations
and with our interests in a competitive global international
telecommunications environment. Accordingly, the United States will
continue to engage the other 142 member countries of INTELSAT in
cooperative multilateral negotiations to achieve these goals.
Several provisions of S. 376 could interfere with the President's
constitutional authority to conduct the Nation's foreign affairs by
directing or burdening the President's negotiations with foreign
governments and international organizations. Specifically, new sections
621 and 661 of the Communications Satellite Act of 1962 purport to
direct the executive branch on how to proceed in foreign negotiations,
and new sections 625(c), 644(b), and 647 purport to require the
executive branch to take particular positions in international
organizations. The President's constitutional authority over foreign
affairs necessarily entails discretion over these matters, and I will
therefore construe these provisions as advisory. To avoid similar
constitutional difficulties, I will construe section 602(b) as not
requiring the United States to take particular positions in
international organizations.
The President has the authority to conduct U.S. international trade
policy and to interpret international treaty obligations, such as those
arising under the World Trade Organization (WTO). In this regard and in
furtherance of new section 601(c) of the Communications Satellite Act of
1962, the appropriate Federal agencies will advise the Federal
Communications Commission on all matters raised by S. 376 concerning
interpretation of and compliance with WTO commitments of the United
States.
I appreciate the changes that the Congress made to section 3 of
this bill, with respect to new section 601(b)(1)(C) of the
Communications Satellite Act of 1962. These changes ensure, among other
things, continued access by the Department of Defense, other national
security agencies, and law enforce-ment and public health and safety
agencies to existing and future Inmarsat and INTELSAT services. To
effectively implement that section, the appropriate Federal agency or
agencies will provide the Federal Communications Commission with
comments on the application of S. 376 to matters related to national
security, law enforcement, and protection of public health and safety.
New section 601(a) of the Communications Satellite Act of 1962
deals with the Federal Communications Commission's licensing of
"separated entities," i.e., privatized entities to which a portion of
INTELSAT's or Inmarsat's assets are transferred before full
privatization. In approving S. 376, I state my understanding that
section 601(a) will be applied as setting forth only one determination
that the Commission must make in issuing a license or other authority to
a separated entity. The Commission will continue to be required to make
the other findings required by the Communications Act of 1934, including
that the Commission apply its public interest review to all those who
operate, or wish to operate, as telecom-muni-cations carriers. By
interpreting section 601(a) in this way, we ensure that this provision
is harmonized with the Communications Act. We further ensure that in
deciding to issue a license or other authority to a separated entity,
the Commission will take into account factors in addition to the impact
on competition of the issuance of a license or other authority, such as
considerations relating to national security, law enforcement, foreign
policy, trade, and public safety.
In addition, in approving S. 376, I state my understanding that
section 647 does not limit the Federal Communications Commission from
assigning, via competitive bidding, domestic satellite service licenses
intended to cover only the United States.
As it has done for the last 6 years, my Administration will consult
closely with the Congress as we negotiate with other countries on how
INTELSAT should be privatized. My Administration has a clear vision for
INTELSAT privatization, one shaped by our overriding concern with
benefiting U.S. consumers through increased competition. We will
participate aggressively in negotiations to ensure that decisions on
privatization promote robust competition and comply with the United
States' international treaty obligations.
WILLIAM J. CLINTON
THE WHITE HOUSE,
March 17, 2000.
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