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Why Does Us National Security Review Affect Corporate Deals?

业务领域:Corporate

US national security review is a regulatory screening process that can block, delay, or condition foreign investment and certain technology transfers affecting critical sectors and sensitive assets.



The review framework involves multiple agencies, strict filing timelines, and escalating scrutiny based on the target company's sector, the foreign investor's jurisdiction, and the nature of intellectual property or operational control at stake. Corporate boards and transaction counsel must understand filing obligations, timing windows, and post-closing compliance exposure because missed deadlines or incomplete disclosures can result in forced divestitures, transaction unwinding, or civil penalties. This article examines the procedural framework, critical sector analysis, mitigation strategies, and enforcement mechanisms that govern national security review of corporate transactions.

Contents


1. Core Procedural Framework and Filing Requirements


ElementKey RequirementPractical Impact
Triggering TransactionForeign person acquires control or operational influence over US business in critical sectorsControl includes board seats, veto rights, or technology access; determines filing obligation
Filing TimelineVoluntary notification before closing; mandatory filing if transaction closes without clearanceMissed pre-closing window creates post-closing enforcement and forced unwinding exposure
Agency Review PeriodInitial 30-day review; potential 45-day extended review if national security concern identifiedDeal timeline extends 75+ days; financing and closing conditions must accommodate review
Information SubmissionComprehensive disclosures on parties, transaction structure, technology, and foreign government tiesIncomplete filings trigger rejection and extended review; false statements carry civil and criminal penalties

Corporations must determine whether a transaction triggers national security review before signing binding agreements. The threshold is not limited to majority equity stakes; operational control, board representation, access to sensitive technology, or influence over critical infrastructure can activate filing obligations. A foreign person includes individuals, foreign corporations, government-owned entities, and investment funds where foreign nationals or governments hold effective control.

Filing must occur before closing when parties seek deal certainty. Voluntary pre-closing notification allows reviewing agencies to complete assessment and either clear the transaction, impose conditions, or recommend divestiture while parties retain contractual flexibility. Closing without clearance creates post-closing enforcement risk, including forced asset sales, operational restrictions, or criminal liability for officers and directors who knowingly proceed.



2. Critical Sectors, Assets, and Trigger Analysis


Determining whether a transaction requires filing depends on mapping the target company's business lines, technology, and infrastructure role against agency guidance on critical sectors and sensitive assets. Certain industries carry per se filing obligations; others require fact-specific analysis of whether foreign control poses a national security nexus.



Covered Sectors and Technology Areas


Critical sectors include defense contracting, aerospace, telecommunications, semiconductor manufacturing, artificial intelligence, biotechnology, energy infrastructure, and financial systems. Within these sectors, even minority investments or technology licensing deals can trigger review if the foreign investor gains board observation rights, access to proprietary research, or influence over supply chain decisions. A venture capital investment in a startup developing quantum computing or advanced semiconductors may face review despite representing a small equity stake.

Technology transfer is a separate trigger. Licensing arrangements, joint ventures, or research collaborations involving US companies and foreign entities in sensitive domains often require filing even when no equity stake changes hands. Agencies assess whether the arrangement permits foreign access to source code, manufacturing processes, or classified research that could be redirected to military applications or strategic competitors.



Real Property and Infrastructure Concerns


Foreign acquisition or long-term leasing of real property near military installations, ports, critical communications infrastructure, or energy facilities triggers heightened scrutiny. A foreign investor's purchase of land adjacent to a naval base, a data center near a government facility, or agricultural property in a sensitive region may require filing. Agencies consider whether property placement creates surveillance risk, supply chain vulnerability, or operational disruption potential.

Corporations must conduct early due diligence on the target's real estate footprint and facility locations. Counsel should map the target's operations against published agency guidance and, when uncertainty exists, consider filing even if the transaction appears tangential to national security. Filing costs less than post-closing forced divestiture.



3. Procedural Defenses and Mitigation Strategies


Once a filing is submitted, corporations have limited formal procedural defenses; the review is executive and administrative rather than judicial. However, transaction structure, timing, and strategic disclosure can materially affect agency outcomes and reduce divestiture or prohibition risk.



Structuring to Reduce National Security Concerns


Corporations can mitigate review risk by restructuring deal terms before filing. Divesting the target's most sensitive business lines, licensing sensitive technology to a separate US-controlled entity, or implementing operational controls that limit foreign investor access to critical functions can reduce agency objections. A foreign investor willing to accept board observation rights without voting power, exclusion from certain committees, or restrictions on technology transfer may obtain clearance where an unfettered control structure would not.

Conditional clearance often requires the parties to execute a security agreement outlining operational restrictions, audit rights, and compliance monitoring. Corporations should negotiate these conditions during the review period rather than after divestiture orders. Counsel should draft conditions narrowly so that they do not impair the target's business operations or create ongoing compliance burdens that make the transaction economically unviable.



Timing and Disclosure Strategy


Corporations benefit from early, comprehensive disclosure during the initial 30-day review window. Withholding information or submitting incomplete filings prolongs review and signals evasion, which hardens agency positions. Conversely, proactive disclosure of foreign government ties, supply chain dependencies, or sensitive technology, paired with concrete mitigation proposals, demonstrates good faith and often accelerates clearance or narrows the scope of conditions.

Timing the filing to avoid compressed review periods helps. Filing during Congressional recess or immediately before holiday closures increases the likelihood of extended review and agency skepticism. Counsel should coordinate filing with transaction counsel to ensure deal financing, closing conditions, and regulatory approvals align with anticipated review timelines.



4. Enforcement and Court Posture


If a corporation closes a transaction without obtaining clearance or in violation of agency conditions, enforcement typically occurs through civil action in federal district court or administrative action by the Treasury Department's Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS). A corporation in New York may face enforcement in the Southern District of New York or the Eastern District of New York, depending on where the target company is located.

In federal court, the government seeks a preliminary injunction requiring divestiture or operational unwinding. Courts defer to agency national security determinations and rarely second-guess CFIUS findings on the merits. A corporation's defense typically rests on procedural defects, such as inadequate notice to the foreign investor before filing, lack of actual control by the foreign investor, or mischaracterization of the target's business in the government filing.

Documentation and timing become critical in enforcement. A corporation that can demonstrate it submitted accurate, complete filings and complied with all agency requests may avoid immediate divestiture. Conversely, delayed loss affidavits, incomplete production of transaction documents, or evidence of concealment during review strengthens the government's case for emergency relief and mandatory unwinding. Corporations should preserve all transaction records, communications with foreign investors, and agency correspondence from the outset.



5. Practical Compliance and Forward-Looking Considerations


Corporations should establish pre-transaction protocols to identify national security filing obligations before deal signing. Counsel must conduct sector and technology analysis early, consult published CFIUS guidance and recent agency determinations in comparable transactions, and consider filing when the transaction presents any plausible national security nexus. Early filing provides deal certainty, reduces post-closing enforcement risk, and preserves contractual flexibility to negotiate conditions or restructure terms.

Documentation discipline is essential. Corporations should maintain contemporaneous records of deal structure decisions, foreign investor due diligence, technology transfer assessments, and board-level consideration of national security implications. These records demonstrate good faith compliance if enforcement occurs and support procedural defenses if the agency's action is later challenged. Boards should document their awareness of national security review obligations and their decision to file or the basis for concluding filing was not required.

For corporations with ongoing foreign relationships or technology partnerships, compliance extends beyond transaction closing. Post-closing monitoring of the foreign investor's board participation, access to sensitive information, and supply chain involvement ensures compliance with agency conditions. Violations of conditional clearance agreements can trigger new enforcement action, forced asset sales, or criminal liability for officers who knowingly permit unauthorized access or technology transfer.

Corporations operating in critical sectors or with sensitive technology should also consider how national security review affects their strategic planning. Understanding the regulatory landscape helps corporations structure internal governance, protect intellectual property, and manage foreign partnerships in ways that reduce future review risk. Counsel focused on CFIUS and US national security matters can assist in assessing transaction triggers, structuring mitigation strategies, and managing post-closing compliance.

The intersection of foreign investment, technology transfer, and national security continues to expand. Corporations should treat national security review as a core transaction risk and engage regulatory counsel early in deal planning to navigate filing obligations, agency review timelines, and enforcement exposure effectively.


27 May, 2026


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