BIS announced a $36,184,680 settlement with Robert Bosch GmbH over foreign-produced MEMS sensor products and automotive software exported to Huawei and affiliates on the Entity List without required authorization.
The UK announced 70 new Russia sanctions covering more than 20 oil tankers, ship insurers, shipping services, LNG vessels linked to Arctic LNG 2, military procurement networks and illicit-finance actors.
British forces boarded the sanctioned shadow-fleet tanker SMYRTOS in the Channel, with the government citing domestic and international law, including UNCLOS Article 110 right-of-visit concepts and UK sanctions powers if a vessel is stateless.
The Supreme Court declined to review the Federal Circuit’s decision upholding List 3 and 4A China Section 301 tariffs, ending the litigation without refunds for tariffs already paid.
Canada amended the Ukraine Goods Remission Order to extend customs-duty relief for goods originating in Ukraine through June 9, 2027, excluding over-access supply-managed goods such as dairy, poultry and eggs.
China’s new State Council Regulation on Outbound Investment takes effect July 1 and creates a centralized outbound-investment regime with national-security review, export-control limits, cross-border data-transfer constraints and countermeasures provisions.
Bloomberg Law reports that Vice Premier He Lifeng said China will add anti-sanctions and blocking provisions to financial legislation to counter what Beijing views as improper unilateral sanctions.
Lawfare’s review of The Web Beneath the Waves highlights undersea cables as critical digital infrastructure shaped by geopolitical fragmentation, Chinese cable actors, US blacklisting of Huawei and HMN Tech, Russia shadow-fleet concerns and China gray-zone tactics.
The EU’s new foreign-investment screening regulation requires Member States to create screening mechanisms and imposes prior authorization for targets active in specified sensitive areas.
Law.com’s Leadership in Law Hong Kong report highlights geopolitical risk, regulatory complexity and cross-border disputes as central expectations for legal lea
OFAC designated a network of individuals, companies and vessels responsible for shipping hundreds of millions of dollars of Iranian-origin LPG, often disguised as Omani LPG, to South and East Asian end users.
The UK published its conclusion summary for a comprehensive FTA with the GCC covering Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, with commitments on legal and professional services, investment protection, digital trade, financial data flows and procurement.
The European Commission's Cloud and AI Development Act policy page defines four sovereignty assurance levels for public bodies: Level 1 requires EU-located processing and storage, Level 2 adds independence from third countries and software supply-chain transparency, Level 3 requires EU ownership/control with additional criteria such as personnel citizenship, and Level 4 requires full software supply-chain transparency and no third-country interference.
Bruegel argues that the EU AI Act should move from a predominantly ex-ante product-safety model toward a hybrid model that lowers up-front burden for many suppliers while adding stronger AI liability, post-deployment monitoring, universal transparency, researcher access, near-miss reporting and a public incident registry.
A 9 June national-security investment update highlights CFIUS's known-investor pilot for repeat allied-country filers, the Outbound Investment Security Program for China-connected semiconductors, quantum and AI investments, and the COINS Act codification that may broaden outbound controls to more countries and technologies.
Global Legal Post reports that MD Communications' 2026 legal-sector outlook found 77 percent of legal leaders expect geopolitical volatility to affect growth plans, while 95 percent are concerned about AI governance and only 5 percent trust current AI quality controls.
The European Commission put forward the 21st Russia sanctions package on 9 June, targeting energy, financial services, crypto, trade and entry restrictions for former Russian combatants.
On 10 June, OFAC sanctioned nine individuals and entities supporting weapons procurement for Iran's IRGC and MODAFL, including China and Hong Kong-based actors, Mustad Shanghai, Domus Trading HK, Solos International and Shangshun Hong Kong.
A June 1 proclamation revises Section 232 tariffs effective June 8, 2026 through December 31, 2027, lowering certain agricultural equipment and residential HVAC components from 25 percent to 15 percent, expanding 15 percent treatment to certain mobile industrial equipment, adding aluminum lithographic plates and steel racks as 25 percent derivatives, and lowering the US-origin content threshold for the 10 percent rate from 95 percent to 85 percent.
Beyond energy and financial services, the Commission's 21st package proposes export restrictions on metals, alloys, ground-support equipment, jamming and drone-launch systems, and import bans on certain metals, ores, car parts and fish products, including a full ban on some categories such as cod.
JD Supra's analysis of the CADA proposal emphasizes that it should be read alongside the EU Data Act, NIS2, DORA, GDPR and the AI Act, and that it provides a blueprint for assessing digital-service sovereignty through exposure to third-country laws, ownership and control, software and hardware supply chains, operational resilience, security, compliance and the ability to prevent third-country interference.
Debevoise reports that the European Council formally adopted the revised EU FDI screening regulation on 8 June 2026, with publication in the Official Journal to follow, entry into force 20 days later, and an 18-month member-state preparation period that points to application around January 2028.
The UK National Security (State Threats) Bill creates a Home Secretary power to designate bodies engaged in foreign power threat activity, with offences for supporting, assisting or obtaining material benefits from designated bodies and penalties of up to 14 years.
The UK-GCC conclusion summary identifies legal services, financial services, digital trade, investment protections, procurement and professional-qualification recognition as core areas of the deal.
The EU adopted its 20th Russia sanctions package on 23 April 2026, entering into force in phased tranches through 24 May 2026, with certain LNG provisions deferred to January 2027.
On 1 June 2026, the French Navy intercepted the Tagor, a sanctioned oil tanker operating under a false flag and departing from Murmansk, approximately 400 nautical miles off Brittany's coast, with UK cooperation.
China's Regulations on Industrial and Supply Chain Security (7 April 2026) and Regulations on Countering Improper Extraterritorial Jurisdiction (13 April 2026) both took effect immediately with no grace period.
On 7 May 2026, EU co-legislators reached a provisional political agreement on the Digital Omnibus on AI, having overcome a stalled trilogue that collapsed on 28 April over conformity-assessment architecture for Annex I embedded systems.
The CFIUS Known Investor Program (KIP), piloted since mid-2025 and the subject of a public comment period closing March 18, 2026, is designed to streamline review for repeat filers from allied countries who have cleared at least three CFIUS transactions in three years, have no adverse committee history, and have minimal ties to adversary countries.
EY-Parthenon's June 2026 M&A outlook forecasts 8 percent growth in US deal volume above $100 million, with corporate M&A projected up 11 percent driven by AI-readiness and resilience transactions.
The Cloud and AI Development Act's single EU-wide sovereignty assessment framework means that within the next legislative cycle, law firms advising EU public-sector or regulated-industry clients on technology procurement will need to evaluate vendor nationality, data-architecture control, and legal-regime reach as standard contract-review elements.
On 1 June 2026, President Trump signed a proclamation adjusting Section 232 tariffs on aluminum, steel, and copper, effective 8 June 2026 through 31 December 2027.
On 3 June 2026, the European Commission presented the European Technological Sovereignty Package, including: the Cloud and AI Development Act (CADA, COM(2026) 502), Chips Act 2.
A South Centre research paper published 29 May 2026 demonstrates that USMCA-model digital-trade rules impose the broadest constraints on governments' ability to mandate local data storage or regulate cross-border data flows, with the weakest exceptions of any major trade agreement model.
Mayer Brown's analysis of China's April 2026 Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Regulations explicitly notes that professional advisers, including law firms and accountants, who assist clients with OFAC, EU, or UK sanctions compliance may be placed on China's malicious entity list.
GOV.UK says the UK Sanctions List was updated on 26 May 2026 with 18 new Russia designations, and that the UK Sanctions List is now the only source for all UK s
Canada amended the Special Economic Measures (Iran) Regulations to add five individuals and four entities linked to procurement networks supporting military-related technology and weapons production.
PwC’s analysis of the US Court of International Trade ruling explains that the temporary 10% section 122 import surcharge was struck down on 7 May 2026, stayed by the Federal Circuit on 12 May, and remains collected while litigation continues.
Linklaters explains that China’s Decree 834 and Decree 835 create supply-chain security powers and countermeasures against foreign extraterritorial jurisdiction, including a malicious-entity list and potential restrictions on data flows, transactions, imports, exports and investment.
IAPP’s Canada Symposium session on cross-border data flows frames data transfers as a strategic issue shaped by EU adequacy, US national-security orders, emerging localization mandates and Canadian privacy obligations.
The Stop Stealing our Chips Act passed the US Senate unanimously and would create a BIS whistleblower incentive program funded by export-control fines.
Recent BIS-focused analysis highlights a policy turn toward end-use controls for advanced ICs and computing items used to train AI models for weapons of mass destruction or military-intelligence uses tied to China and other Country Group D:5 destinations.
IBA’s Apr/May legal business analysis says the US Supreme Court rejected the use of IEEPA as authority for sweeping tariffs, while the administration moved to section 122 and signalled possible section 232 and 301 alternatives.
The Atlantic Council says the European Commission is scheduled to release a Tech Sovereignty Package on 3 June 2026, including a Cloud and AI Development Act, Chips Act update and formal definition of digital sovereignty.
The European Parliament approved new rules requiring mandatory screening for foreign investments in sensitive sectors including defence, semiconductors, AI, critical raw materials and financial services.
Blank Rome’s May 26 item signals that food and agriculture supply chains are now part of the sanctions and geopolitics conversation, not a separate operational category.
The Atlantic Council’s digital-sovereignty triad gives law firms a vocabulary for evaluating their own cloud, AI and managed-service dependencies as well as client technology stacks.
GOV.UK’s NSI final-order collection was updated on 21 May 2026 and lists 2026 final orders involving Plessey Semiconductors, SFL Mobile Radio, Balmoral Comtec a
The section 122 dispute shows why legal teams need live inventories of tariff clauses, refund-entitlement provisions, customs entries and protest deadlines.
Treasury’s action against flotilla organisers and Muslim Brotherhood-linked networks supporting Hamas puts financial institutions, nonprofits and sanctions counsel on notice that humanitarian-adjacent activity can still trigger counterterrorism exposure.
Weil’s analysis of the COINS Act shows outbound investment screening shifting from an executive-order programme into a statutory regime, with Treasury implementing regulations due by 13 March 2027.
Anderson Mori & Tomotsune’s update on Japan’s FEFTA amendment bill highlights a proposed investment-screening committee co-chaired by the Ministry of Finance and National Security Secretariat, with operations expected from July 2026.
DLA Piper’s update shows the EU’s 20th Russia package moving beyond listings into anti-circumvention mechanics, including targeted restrictions on high-risk goods destined for Kyrgyzstan, more than 60 Annex IV additions, managed-cybersecurity restrictions, bank and crypto controls and maritime measures.
Kobre & Kim’s 21 May analysis says China’s April 2026 supply-chain security rules can penalise conduct viewed as harmful to industrial and supply-chain stability, including conduct driven by foreign sanctions, forced-labour, export-control or investment-screening obligations.
IAPP’s analysis of AI-discovered vulnerabilities argues that defenders need to share cybersecurity data across borders quickly, while data sovereignty and localisation laws may restrict that sharing.
The European Parliament approved revised rules for mandatory member-state screening of foreign investments in defence, semiconductors, AI, critical raw materials and financial services by 508 votes to 64, with 90 abstentions.
CELIS reports that Finland’s planned FDI reform would extend screening to classified information, ICT services, critical infrastructure, security of supply, data centres, strategic raw materials and certain greenfield investments.
Ankura’s boardroom analysis captures the shift from episodic geopolitical monitoring to continuous scenario planning across sanctions, supply chains, cyber, trade and crisis response.
The UK’s new Russia measures came into effect on 20 May 2026 and prohibit importing HS 2710 oil products processed in a third country from Russian-origin HS 2709 crude, alongside related technical assistance, financial services, funds and brokering.
The UK issued general licences covering certain sanctioned processed oil products and maritime LNG transportation, including diesel and jet fuel under licence GBSAN0004 and specified Sakhalin-2 and Yamal LNG movements under a licence expiring 1 January 2027.
The UK government’s sanctions enforcement strategy sets out OFSI, OTSI and DfT roles, civil penalties of up to £1 million or 50% of breach value, and potential imprisonment of 7 years for financial and transport breaches and 10 years for trade breaches.
OFAC’s Iran sanctions page lists an April 28, 2026 alert on sanctions risk in dealing with teapot oil refineries, alongside recent general licences tied to refinery and vessel wind-down activity.
PIIE reports that the Court of International Trade heard challenges to temporary tariffs imposed under Section 122 balance-of-payments authority after earlier IEEPA-based tariffs were struck down.
The UK’s sanctions end-use controls came into force on 13 May 2026, creating a licensing requirement when exporters are informed of diversion risk to sanctioned territories or connected persons.
The European Commission says the EU’s 20th Russia sanctions package activates the anti-circumvention tool for the first time and lists 120 additional people and entities.
Morgan Lewis explains that BIS shifted certain AI chip exports to China and Macau from a presumption of denial to case-by-case review, but only under strict conditions covering supply, testing, KYC, restricted-party screening, remote access and IaaS safeguards.
Mayer Brown’s analysis of the proposed Industrial Accelerator Act highlights public procurement, fast-tracked permitting and tighter FDI screening for strategic sectors such as batteries, EVs, solar photovoltaics and critical raw materials.
Mayer Brown explains that the DOJ Data Security Program regulates transactions involving access to covered data by countries of concern, including China, Hong Kong, Macau, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Russia and Venezuela.
The revised EU FDI screening framework would require Member States to screen at least a common list of critical sectors including dual-use items, military equipment, AI, quantum technologies, semiconductors, critical raw materials and key infrastructure.
Bloomberg Law’s commentary argues that firms often advise clients on geopolitical risk while failing to apply the same lens to their own people, data, reputation and operations.
The UK enforcement strategy specifically points to due diligence, screening, suspected-breach reporting and professional-regulator expectations, while the week’s US and EU signals show data, AI, investment and tariffs all moving through security logic.
The BIS AI-chip update requires attention to whether prohibited users can access chips remotely, including through infrastructure-as-a-service environments.
Treasury’s outbound investment programme covers certain US-person investments involving China, Hong Kong and Macau in semiconductors and microelectronics, quantum information technologies and artificial intelligence.
Reuters reports that US officials are considering AI-chip export rules built around licensing thresholds, government-to-government assurances, monitoring, site visits and possible foreign investment in US AI data centers.
Chatham House argues that chip controls are leaky, increasingly vulnerable to smuggling and less decisive as AI gains come from algorithmic efficiency, inference optimization and model design.
Mayer Brown highlights the combined effect of PADFAA, DOJ’s Data Security Program, state enforcement and class-action theories around cross-border data access.
Bloomberg Law’s commentary argues that firms often advise clients on geopolitical risk while underestimating their own exposure through travel, data, reputation, client selection, sanctions shifts and beneficial-ownership opacity.
Paul Hastings’ 2026 GC outlook ties tariffs, AI fragmentation, critical minerals, immigration shocks and cyber attribution to legal operating decisions.
IISD’s April 2026 report maps the tension between cross-border data flows, localization measures, public safeguards, economic security and trade-law commitments.
The revised EU FDI screening direction would impose a minimum list of critical sectors, two-phase reviews, stronger cooperation tools, retrospective powers and scrutiny of certain intra-EU structures.
Bloomberg Law’s conduct-rule analysis uses the Trump administration’s law-firm executive-order fights to show how political pressure can reach security clearances, government contracting, pro bono commitments and lateral-client dynamics.
The UK’s new Regulation 55A regime comes into force on 13 May 2026 and allows DBT, OTSI, HMRC and related agencies to issue written notices that make otherwise uncontrolled goods licensable where diversion risk exists.
Canada’s March 2026 Iran amendments add four entities and five individuals linked to procurement networks supporting IRGC military activity, weapons production and transfers.
The Peterson Institute’s review of Court of International Trade arguments shows the legal fight moving from IEEPA to balance-of-payments tariff authority and, potentially, Section 301.
Pinsent Masons warns that rerouting supply chains during Middle East conflict pressure can introduce new sanctions exposure through unfamiliar individuals, entities, vessels and jurisdictions.
Debevoise frames the current US posture as targeted restrictions on Chinese companies, investors and activities tied to advanced technology, critical infrastructure, communications and supply chains.
The European Commission announced a 20th package of Russia sanctions covering energy, shipping, trade, finance, anti-circumvention, crypto/digital rouble issues, shadow-fleet vessels, 120 additional listings, 60 entities, 20 additional Russian banks, and new export and import bans.
Burness Paull’s spring sanctions update highlights the single UK sanctions list, OFSI enforcement changes, the Early Account Scheme, major UK sanctions packages, penalties involving Bank of Scotland and Apple Distribution International, and new sanctions end-use controls from May 12, 2026.
Alvarez & Marsal warns that AI technology export enforcement now reaches record penalties, criminal liability, securities exposure, remote access to controlled computing and hardware-level chip-location verification.
The Federal Register notice on advanced computing commodities captures the shift in license-review policy for AI-relevant chips and advanced computing items.
GHY International reports that Canada amended the Special Economic Measures (Russia) Regulations to add 100 shadow-fleet vessels and service prohibitions including financial services, insurance and technical or logistical support.
Reuters frames trade law as national-security policy, covering the convergence of tariffs, export controls, sanctions, supply-chain restrictions, IEEPA, ITAR, OFAC, EAR and CFIUS.
The U.S. Treasury’s CFIUS enforcement page emphasizes monitoring and enforcement against failure to file, non-compliance with mitigation terms, material misstat
Global Policy Watch summarizes the agreed compromise text for a new EU foreign-investment-screening regulation, including mandatory national screening, a 45-day Phase 1 process and expanded coverage of sectors such as AI, semiconductors, quantum and other critical areas.
Taken together, the sanctions, export-control, trade, AI-chip and investment-screening signals show why geopolitical risk cannot sit solely with one specialist group.
Bloomberg Law’s commentary on executive orders targeting law firms frames the issue around professional conduct and the ability of firms to push back against government pressure.