The Pentagon is taking a harder look at proposed foreign acquisitions of US companies given the increasing financial complexity of such deals, but continues to encourage foreign investment, a top US defence official said this week.
"If you have a deal that is in the interest of the US economy and does not impinge on national security, we will approve it," said Brett Lambert, the Pentagon's representative on an interagency committee that reviews foreign takeovers.
Lambert, who retires Saturday after four years as the deputy assistant secretary of defence for manufacturing and industrial policy, bristled at the suggestion that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) was making it difficult for foreign investors to acquire US companies.
Also Read
"It's completely the opposite," Lambert told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday.
He said foreign interest in US companies remained high, given the continued importance of the US defence market despite recent budget cuts, and said he expected the number of foreign transactions reviewed by CFIUS to double in coming years from more than 100 last year.
"You have foreign capital that wants to come in, which we want, which we encourage. The question is how do we allow that foreign capital to come in while protecting national security," Lambert said.
He acknowledged that the Defence Department and other agencies involved in the CFIUS review process were often taking longer to review transactions but said that was largely because of the increasing complexity of the transactions.


