Indeed 
And these kinds of per-country restrictions are more common than most people think. I've had numerous (non-government) customers who would not even let sales reps into the building to talk about their products if they worked for non-US / non-NATO companies.
We were one of those back in the latter part of our career (even for US reps!!). We had rooms/labs where no cell phones, computers, even USB sticks were allowed, no LAN, and the Power was filtered for emissions. The entire office/lab area was within an EMI chamber with physical penetration requirements (think of a bank vault). All TE was HP/Tek/Fluke and later R&S with a sprinkling of Power Designs PSs. Double Cypher locked with waiting room between for "pre approval" entry, guards weren't even allowed unless escorted. Recall having to jump thru hoops to get a new Stanford Research generator, as they weren't on the "approved TE list".
One solution we did was to have a lab with less restrictions, where other TE, employees, and company executives were allowed, and we could bring outside people in with prior approval (US citizens only tho).
All this made a difficult task, even more difficult!! High level Security folks tend to be paranoid, which is probably good, but can cause signifiant impediments to technical progress.
One funny story. We had a new security person that liked to
impose her authority. It was so bad that we weren't allowed to covey design requirements (voltage, current, noise) for a small part of a custom chip design (multiple LDOs) that the company Canadian group was doing, just the regulators.
During a meeting with special customers which she was attending and reading the meeting restrictions beforehand (standard practice), we stopped her discussion and asked what paper and pencil/pen had been handed out to everyone for taking notes (laptops not allowed). The pens were of Chinese origin and per her requirements/instructions the meeting had to be adjourned and a full security breach report submitted and everyone interviewed. She was pissed, and didn't last much longer as our direct security person and moved on to another unfortunate group somewhere

Selective TE is just a fact in certain development/test environments, and technical folks must deal with such, even as painful and costly as it is
Best