§ 4863.
Requirement to buy strategic materials critical to national security from American sources; exceptions
(a)
Requirement.—
Except as provided in subsections (b) through (m), the acquisition by the Department of Defense of the following items is prohibited:
(1)
The following types of end items, or components thereof, containing a specialty metal not melted or produced in the United States: aircraft, missile and space systems, ships, tank and automotive items, weapon systems, or ammunition.
(2)
A specialty metal that is not melted or produced in the United States and that is to be purchased directly by the Department of Defense or a prime contractor of the Department.
(e)
Exception for Commissaries, Exchanges, and Other Nonappropriated Fund Instrumentalities.—
Subsection (a) does not apply to items purchased for resale purposes in commissaries, exchanges, and nonappropriated fund instrumentalities operated by the Department of Defense.
(h)
Applicability to Acquisitions of Commercial Products.—
(1)
Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3), this section applies to acquisitions of commercial products, notwithstanding sections 1906 and 1907 of title 41.
(2)
This section does not apply to contracts or subcontracts for the acquisition of commercially available off-the-shelf items, as defined in
section 104 of title 41, other than—
(A)
contracts or subcontracts for the acquisition of specialty metals, including mill products, such as bar, billet, slab, wire, plate and sheet, that have not been incorporated into end items, subsystems, assemblies, or components;
(B)
contracts or subcontracts for the acquisition of forgings or castings of specialty metals, unless such forgings or castings are incorporated into commercially available off-the-shelf end items, subsystems, or assemblies;
(C)
contracts or subcontracts for commercially available high performance magnets unless such high performance magnets are incorporated into commercially available off-the-shelf-end items or subsystems; and
(D)
contracts or subcontracts for commercially available off-the-shelf fasteners, unless such fasteners are—
(i)
incorporated into commercially available off-the-shelf end items, subsystems, assemblies, or components; or
(ii)
purchased as provided in paragraph (3).
(3)
This section does not apply to fasteners that are commercial products that are purchased under a contract or subcontract with a manufacturer of such fasteners, if the manufacturer has certified that it will purchase, during the relevant calendar year, an amount of domestically melted specialty metal, in the required form, for use in the production of such fasteners for sale to the Department of Defense and other customers, that is not less than 50 percent of the total amount of the specialty metal that it will purchase to carry out the production of such fasteners.
(l)
Specialty Metal Defined.—
In this section, the term “specialty metal” means any of the following:
(1)
Steel—
(A)
with a maximum alloy content exceeding one or more of the following limits: manganese, 1.65 percent; silicon, 0.60 percent; or copper, 0.60 percent; or
(B)
containing more than 0.25 percent of any of the following elements: aluminum, chromium, cobalt, columbium, molybdenum, nickel, titanium, tungsten, or vanadium.
(2)
Metal alloys consisting of nickel, iron-nickel, and cobalt base alloys containing a total of other alloying metals (except iron) in excess of 10 percent.
(3)
Titanium and titanium alloys.
(4)
Zirconium and zirconium base alloys.
(m)
Additional Definitions.—
In this section:
(1)
The term “United States” includes possessions of the United States.
(2)
The term “component” has the meaning provided in
(4)
The term “required form” shall not apply to end items or to their components at any tier. The term “required form” means in the form of mill product, such as bar, billet, wire, slab, plate or sheet, and in the grade appropriate for the production of—
(A)
a finished end item delivered to the Department of Defense; or
(B)
a finished component assembled into an end item delivered to the Department of Defense.
(6)
The term “assemblies” means items forming a portion of a system or subsystem that can be provisioned and replaced as an entity and which incorporates multiple, replaceable parts.
(7)
The term “commercial derivative military article” means an item procured by the Department of Defense that is or will be produced using the same production facilities, a common supply chain, and the same or similar production processes that are used for the production of articles predominantly used by the general public or by nongovernmental entities for purposes other than governmental purposes.
(8)
The term “subsystem” means a functional grouping of items that combine to perform a major function within an end item, such as electrical power, attitude control, and propulsion.
(9)
The term “end item” means the final production product when assembled or completed, and ready for issue, delivery, or deployment.
(10)
The term “subcontract” includes a subcontract at any tier.
(Added [Pub. L. 109–364, div. A, title VIII, § 842(a)(1)], Oct. 17, 2006, [120 Stat. 2335], § 2533b; amended [Pub. L. 110–181, div. A, title VIII, § 804(a)]–(f), Jan. 28, 2008, [122 Stat. 208–211]; [Pub. L. 111–350, § 5(b)(39)], Jan. 4, 2011, [124 Stat. 3845]; [Pub. L. 111–383, div. A, title X, § 1075(f)(2)], Jan. 7, 2011, [124 Stat. 4376]; [Pub. L. 113–291, div. A, title X, § 1071(a)(10)], Dec. 19, 2014, [128 Stat. 3505]; [Pub. L. 115–232, div. A, title VIII, § 837(c)], Aug. 13, 2018, [132 Stat. 1875]; [Pub. L. 116–92, div. A, title IX, § 902(77)], Dec. 20, 2019, [133 Stat. 1552]; renumbered § 4863 and amended [Pub. L. 116–283, div. A, title XVIII], §§ 1870(c)(2), 1883(b)(2), Jan. 1, 2021, [134 Stat. 4285], 4294; [Pub. L. 117–81, div. A, title XVII, § 1701(d)(18)], Dec. 27, 2021, [135 Stat. 2138]; [Pub. L. 117–263, div. A, title XIV, § 1411(d)(2)(A)], Dec. 23, 2022, [136 Stat. 2871]; [Pub. L. 118–31, div. A, title VIII, § 833(a)], Dec. 22, 2023, [137 Stat. 337].)