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Foci Mitigation: Facility Clearances under Foreign Ownership or Contro



FOCI mitigation is the process by which a U.S. .ompany under foreign ownership, control, or influence puts measures in place to obtain or keep a facility security clearance and perform classified work. FOCI stands for foreign ownership, control, or influence, and when a cleared or clearance-seeking contractor is subject to it, the government generally requires that the FOCI be reduced or neutralized through an approved arrangement. The Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency oversees this under the National Industrial Security Program, governed by the rule at 32 CFR Part 117, and the right mitigation depends on how much foreign involvement exists. Whether you are a contractor facing foreign investment or an investor acquiring a cleared company, FOCI mitigation directly affects whether the clearance survives the deal.

FOCI mitigation sits at the intersection of national security, government contracting, and corporate governance, and the available arrangements range from modest board measures to structures that fully insulate the company from foreign control. An unmitigated FOCI situation can block or cost a company its clearance, so the appropriate approach depends on the nature and degree of the foreign interest and the classified work involved.


1. What Foci Mitigation Means for Cleared Contractors


FOCI mitigation is the process a cleared or clearance-seeking contractor uses to address foreign ownership, control, or influence so it can remain eligible for a facility security clearance. The issue is not foreign ownership alone, but whether a foreign interest could affect the company's management, operations, classified work, or access to sensitive information in a way that creates national security risk. A board seat, a veto right, significant debt, or a key contract can each create FOCI even without majority ownership. To hold a clearance in that situation, the contractor must adopt a government-approved arrangement that insulates classified work from the foreign interest, with the method scaling to the degree of foreign involvement.

InstrumentWhen It Is Commonly UsedCore Effect
Board ResolutionLimited foreign ownership with no board representation rightsExcludes foreign owner from classified matters
Security Control AgreementForeign interest has board representation but does not control the companyAdds cleared U.S. .versight and a government security committee
Special Security AgreementForeign owner effectively owns or controls the companyAllows foreign ownership while insulating classified work
Proxy AgreementSignificant foreign control requiring stronger insulationVoting rights exercised by cleared U.S. .roxy holders
Voting TrustStrongest separation structureLegal title or voting control held by cleared U.S. .rustees


What Does Foreign Ownership, Control, or Influence Mean?


Foreign ownership, control, or influence means a foreign interest has the ability to affect a company in ways that could put classified information or national security at risk. Foreign ownership refers to a foreign person or entity holding a stake in the company, control refers to the power to direct its management or decisions, and influence refers to other means, such as contracts, debt, or relationships, that could let a foreign interest affect the company. Even without majority ownership, significant influence can trigger FOCI considerations.

Companies disclose foreign interests to the government on a standard form, the SF-328 Certificate Pertaining to Foreign Interests, which the government uses to assess whether and how a company must mitigate. Because FOCI captures a range of relationships beyond simple ownership, the disclosure and analysis often overlap with foreign investment compliance more broadly.



Why Is Foci Mitigation Required


FOCI mitigation is required because a company under foreign influence cannot hold a facility security clearance unless the risk to classified information is adequately addressed. The government's concern is that a foreign interest could gain access to classified information or pressure the company in ways that harm national security, so it conditions clearance eligibility on neutralizing that risk. Without acceptable mitigation, a company may be denied a clearance or have an existing one revoked, which can disqualify it from classified contracts.

Access to classified work is often essential to defense and government contractors, so maintaining a clearance through proper mitigation can be vital to the business, and it supports the protection of classified and export-controlled information. The requirement reflects the balance between allowing foreign investment and safeguarding classified information.



2. Foci Mitigation Instruments and Governance Options


FOCI is mitigated through a set of arrangements that escalate in stringency according to the degree of foreign ownership or control. For limited foreign interest, a board resolution may suffice to exclude the foreign owner from classified matters. Greater involvement may call for a security control agreement or a special security agreement, which allow foreign ownership while building in governance safeguards that insulate classified work. The most significant foreign control is typically addressed through a proxy agreement or voting trust, which place the company's voting rights in the hands of cleared U.S. .itizens.

The choice among these instruments depends on the facts, including the size of the foreign stake and the sensitivity of the work, and each arrangement comes with its own governance requirements and oversight. Selecting and implementing the right instrument is the heart of FOCI mitigation.



What Are Board Resolutions and Security Control Agreements?


Board resolutions and security control agreements are mitigation instruments used for lower levels of FOCI. A board resolution is generally appropriate when a foreign interest holds a minority position without board representation rights, and it formally excludes that interest from access to classified information and from decisions affecting classified work. A security control agreement is used when foreign involvement is more substantial, such as foreign board representation, but still does not amount to control, adding governance measures like cleared officials and a government security committee while the company remains under U.S. .ontrol.

These lighter instruments work because the foreign interest's ability to influence classified matters is limited to begin with. They rely on governance safeguards rather than restructuring ownership, which generally makes them less burdensome than the arrangements used for higher levels of foreign control.



What Are Ssas, Proxy Agreements, and Voting Trusts?


Special security agreements, proxy agreements, and voting trusts are the instruments used when a foreign interest effectively owns or controls a U.S. .ompany. A special security agreement allows the foreign owner to have board representation while establishing structures that insulate classified work, including cleared U.S. .irectors and a security committee that oversees compliance, so a foreign-owned company can perform classified contracts under strict safeguards.

Proxy agreements and voting trusts go further and are the most stringent options, used where foreign control must be fully separated from classified operations. Under these arrangements, the foreign owner's voting rights are exercised by cleared U.S. .itizens, proxy holders or voting trustees, independently of the foreign owner, who retains financial ownership but gives up day-to-day control. Because these structures provide the strongest insulation, they are used where the foreign interest would otherwise have controlling influence, often alongside foreign investment review of the underlying transaction.



3. Dcsa Oversight and Ongoing Compliance


FOCI mitigation is not just a one-time agreement; it involves ongoing governance and oversight administered through the National Industrial Security Program. The Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency reviews FOCI situations, approves mitigation arrangements, and monitors compliance, with the governing requirements set out in 32 CFR Part 117, the rule that codifies the National Industrial Security Program Operating Manual. Mitigated companies typically must maintain specific governance structures and supplemental plans to keep classified and controlled information protected.

These ongoing obligations keep the mitigation effective over time, not just at the outset. Because the government continues to oversee mitigated contractors, maintaining the required structures and demonstrating compliance is a continuing responsibility throughout the life of the clearance.



Who Oversees Foci Mitigation?


FOCI mitigation is overseen primarily by the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency, which administers the National Industrial Security Program for most cleared contractors. This agency evaluates whether a company is under FOCI, reviews and approves the proposed mitigation instrument, and monitors the company's ongoing compliance with the arrangement. The applicable requirements are set out in 32 CFR Part 117, the federal industrial security rule that governs how classified information is protected in industry.

Because this oversight is continuous, a mitigated company interacts with the agency throughout the life of its clearance, not only when the arrangement is first put in place. Government contractors generally address FOCI as part of their broader obligations when performing classified government contracts.



What Governance Structures and Supplemental Plans Are Required?


FOCI mitigation, especially at higher levels, requires specific governance structures designed to keep classified work insulated from foreign influence. These commonly include a government security committee made up of cleared directors and officers responsible for security compliance, cleared outside directors who are U.S. .itizens, and a facility security officer who manages the security program.

Depending on the mitigation agreement, the company may also need supplemental plans, such as an Affiliated Operations Plan, Technology Control Plan, Electronic Communications Plan, Visitation Plan, or Facilities Location Plan, to control affiliate services, communications, access, and facility separation. Because regulators expect these mechanisms to be genuinely implemented and maintained, building effective governance is a core part of mitigation and closely related to a company's overall regulatory compliance program.



How Does Foci Relate to National Interest Determinations?


A national interest determination can come into play when a company mitigated by a special security agreement needs access to particularly sensitive proscribed information, such as Top Secret information, sensitive compartmented information, special access program information, communications security material, or restricted data. A company operating under an SSA may still need a national interest determination before accessing such information, with the government assessing whether access is consistent with the national security interests of the United States.

Certain exceptions may apply, including for qualifying NTIB-related entities under Section 842 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 and current agency guidance reflected in 32 CFR Part 117. The National Technology and Industrial Base currently comprises the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada, but the availability of that relief depends on the ownership structure, the information involved, and the government's determination, so this is an area to confirm against current rules.



4. Foci Mitigation, Cfius, and Foreign Investment Timing


FOCI mitigation frequently arises alongside foreign investment in U.S. .ompanies, and it is important to distinguish it from the separate national security review of transactions. When a foreign investor acquires or invests in a U.S. .ompany with a facility clearance, two things can happen in parallel: the transaction itself may be reviewed for national security concerns, and the cleared company must arrange FOCI mitigation to keep its clearance.

A practical point matters for deal planning: even after a transaction clears national security review and closes, the facility clearance can be affected until the FOCI mitigation arrangement is approved. Coordinating the timing of both processes is essential when structuring foreign investment in cleared companies.



How Is Foci Mitigation Different from Cfius Review?


FOCI mitigation frequently arises alongside foreign investment in U.S. .ompanies, and it is important to distinguish it from the separate national security review of transactions. When a foreign investor acquires or invests in a U.S. .ompany with a facility clearance, two things can happen in parallel: the transaction itself may be reviewed for national security concerns, and the cleared company must arrange FOCI mitigation to keep its clearance.

A practical point matters for deal planning: even after a transaction clears national security review and closes, the facility clearance can be affected until the FOCI mitigation arrangement is approved. Coordinating the timing of both processes is essential when structuring foreign investment in cleared companies.



How Is Foci Mitigation Different from Cfius Review?


FOCI mitigation and CFIUS review often arise in the same transaction, but they answer different questions: CFIUS reviews the national security risk of the foreign investment and can impose conditions or block a deal, while FOCI mitigation determines whether the cleared company can keep its facility clearance after foreign involvement is introduced. CFIUS operates at the transaction level, and FOCI mitigation operates through the industrial security program.

The two can overlap when a foreign acquisition of a cleared company triggers both, but they are handled by different authorities. Even after CFIUS clears a deal and it closes, the facility clearance can remain affected until the FOCI mitigation is approved, so CFIUS compliance and clearance mitigation are generally planned together.



When Should a Company Address Foci Mitigation?


A company should address FOCI mitigation early, ideally before or during any transaction that introduces foreign ownership, control, or influence into a cleared or clearance-seeking business. Identifying FOCI and planning mitigation in advance helps avoid disruption to the clearance and to classified contract performance, since an unaddressed FOCI situation can jeopardize the clearance. Early planning also lets the company and any foreign investor structure the arrangement in a workable way.

Mitigation can significantly affect governance and the foreign owner's role, so building it into deal planning rather than addressing it after the fact is far more effective. Companies navigating foreign investment in cleared businesses often coordinate FOCI mitigation with deal timing, governance, and clearance-risk issues from the outset, drawing on related foreign investment law considerations.



5. When Foci Mitigation Needs Legal Review


Although some FOCI situations are straightforward, many warrant careful legal review because the clearance, the transaction, and the governance all have to align. Several recurring triggers make review especially valuable, and missing them can put a clearance or a deal at risk.

Review is particularly worthwhile with a foreign acquisition of a cleared contractor, a new foreign investor, foreign board or veto rights, foreign debt or contractual influence, a classified contract bid, the SF-328 disclosure, questions from the overseeing agency, the negotiation of a special security agreement, proxy agreement, or voting trust, or overlapping CFIUS timing. In these situations, confirming how the foreign interest affects the clearance, choosing the right instrument, and addressing governance and supplemental plans help protect both the clearance and the investment, often in coordination with related national security and foreign investment reviews.



What Happens If Foci Is Not Mitigated?


If FOCI is not adequately mitigated, a company can be denied a facility security clearance or have an existing clearance revoked, which can prevent it from performing classified contracts. The government will not allow access to classified information where foreign influence poses an unacceptable risk, so failing to put acceptable mitigation in place has direct and serious consequences for a cleared contractor. Losing a clearance can mean losing eligibility for significant government work.

Beyond the clearance itself, unaddressed FOCI can complicate transactions and create compliance problems. The stakes lead companies facing FOCI to treat mitigation as essential, often addressing it alongside related concerns such as protecting sensitive technology and meeting export control obligations that frequently arise for the same businesses.



What Can Delay Facility Clearance Approval?


Several issues can delay facility clearance approval in a FOCI situation. Incomplete or inconsistent SF-328 disclosures, unresolved questions about the ownership structure, lengthy negotiation of the mitigation instrument, and the time needed to put governance structures and supplemental plans in place can each slow the process. Where access to proscribed information is involved, additional determinations may add time depending on the circumstances.

Overlapping transaction review can also affect timing, since the clearance may remain unsettled until mitigation is approved even after a deal closes. Because these delays can interrupt classified contract performance, identifying and addressing the likely bottlenecks early, including accurate disclosures and a realistic mitigation plan, helps keep the clearance on track.



6. Frequently Asked Questions about Foci Mitigatio


These questions come from contractors and investors dealing with foreign ownership of cleared companies who want to understand how FOCI mitigation works.



What Does Foci Stand for?


FOCI stands for foreign ownership, control, or influence. It describes a situation where a foreign interest has the ability, through ownership, control, or other means such as contracts, debt, or relationships, to potentially affect a U.S. .ompany in a way that could compromise classified information or national security. A company is considered under FOCI when such foreign involvement exists, even if it falls short of majority ownership, because significant influence alone can raise concerns. When a cleared or clearance-seeking contractor is under FOCI, the government generally requires that the foreign interest's ability to affect classified work be reduced or neutralized through an approved mitigation arrangement before the company can hold a facility security clearance.



Why Does a Company Need Foci Mitigation?


A company needs FOCI mitigation because it cannot hold a facility security clearance while a foreign interest could improperly influence its classified work. The government conditions clearance eligibility on neutralizing that risk, so a company under foreign ownership, control, or influence must adopt an approved arrangement that insulates classified operations. Without acceptable mitigation, the company may be denied a clearance or have one revoked, disqualifying it from classified contracts. For defense and government contractors, that can be existential, which is why FOCI is taken seriously.



What Are the Main Foci Mitigation Instruments?


The main FOCI mitigation instruments escalate in stringency with the degree of foreign ownership or control. For limited foreign interest, a board resolution can exclude the foreign owner from classified matters. For more substantial involvement short of control, a security control agreement adds governance safeguards. When a foreign interest owns or controls the company, a special security agreement allows ownership while insulating classified work through cleared directors and a security committee. For significant foreign control, a proxy agreement or voting trust vests voting rights in cleared U.S. .itizens, fully separating the foreign owner from control of classified operations. The right instrument depends on the facts, including the size of the foreign stake and the sensitivity of the work involved.



How Is Foci Mitigation Different from Cfius Review?


FOCI mitigation and CFIUS review are distinct but related processes that often arise together. CFIUS examines whether a foreign investment creates national security risks at the transaction level and can impose conditions or block a deal. FOCI mitigation addresses whether a cleared company can keep its facility security clearance despite foreign ownership or control, operating through the industrial security program rather than transaction review. They answer different questions and are handled by different authorities, but a foreign acquisition of a cleared company can trigger both. Even after CFIUS clears a deal and it closes, the facility clearance can remain affected until the FOCI mitigation is approved, so companies generally address both together when structuring such deals.



Who Approves and Oversees Foci Mitigation?


FOCI mitigation is approved and overseen primarily by the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency, which administers the National Industrial Security Program for most cleared contractors under 32 CFR Part 117. The agency determines whether a company is under FOCI, reviews and approves the mitigation instrument, and monitors ongoing compliance. Oversight is continuous, so a mitigated company maintains required governance structures, such as a government security committee and cleared officials, and interacts with the agency throughout the life of its clearance rather than only at the outset.



Can a Foreign-Owned Company Hold a U.S. Facility Clearance?


Yes, a foreign-owned company can hold a U.S. .acility security clearance, but generally only with acceptable FOCI mitigation in place. Depending on the degree of foreign ownership or control, it may use a special security agreement, which permits foreign ownership while insulating classified work, or a proxy agreement or voting trust that vests voting control in cleared U.S. .itizens. These arrangements let the company perform classified contracts under safeguards that prevent the foreign owner from accessing classified information or controlling classified operations. So foreign ownership does not automatically bar a clearance, but the company must adopt and maintain a government-approved arrangement appropriate to its level of FOCI.


23 Apr, 2026


The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Reading or relying on the contents of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with our firm. For advice regarding your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.
Certain informational content on this website may utilize technology-assisted drafting tools and is subject to attorney review.

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