19 February 1998

Mr. Peter Gutmann
24 Durness Pl.
Orewa
AUCKLAND

Dear Mr Gutmann,

Thanks for your letter of 12 February. First, you asked us to send you a copy of the Wassenaar Arrangement. In fact, the Wassenaar Arrangement document merely consists of a list of categories - which you already have in the form of your copy of New Zealand's Controls on the Export of Strategic Goods - and a short declaration attached to them. Together they compromise the 'initial elements' of the regime. The declaration is attached.

You also asked what the requirements were for the temporary export of cryptographic products, in this case the software product Cryptlib. We would have no problem in principle with the temporary export of Cryptlib to the United States as described in your letter on the following conditions:

You can send the completed export of strategic goods application to me here at the Ministry by fax on (04) 494 8520 or send it by mail.

I hope this helps you with your enquiries.

Yours sincerely,

John Borrie
for Secretary of Foreign Affairs and Trade


[1] This is specifically forbidden by the US and Australian temporary export provisions, however temporary export is possibly the one area in which NZ doesn't follow the US government export requirements word for word (in fact temporary export isn't even addressed in any NZ regulations, so the export conditions were probably invented on the spot).