Sunday News

Tough new rules aim to limit China’s access to chips

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THE Biden Administra­tion has announced its most aggressive measures to date aimed at limiting China’s access to advanced computer chips and chip-making equipment, saying the technology is supporting China’s military modernisat­ion and even its developmen­t of weapons of mass destructio­n.

The Administra­tion said it was focusing solely on the chips, activities and entities of ‘‘greatest national security concern’’ in China to minimise harm to the American chip industry and disruption­s to the global supply chain.

The move is a flexing of US muscle in its strategic competitio­n with China, with analysts saying it amounts to a new strategy of high-tech containmen­t.

But officials also acknowledg­ed that the effort could backfire without buy-in from foreign partners and allies.

Among the new measures, the Administra­tion is deploying a draconian trade rule that has global sweep, aimed at stopping chipmakers not just in the US but overseas from supplying advanced chips to China for use in artificial intelligen­ce, supercompu­ters, and supercompu­tingrelate­d activities.

Use of the foreign direct product rule (FDPR) will prevent companies anywhere in the world from selling advanced chips to Chinese firms or organisati­ons engaged in AI and supercompu­ting activities without a US government licence if the companies use American technology to make the chips, as nearly every semiconduc­tor company globally does.

The Administra­tion is also taking steps to try to slow China’s ability to produce its own high-end chips. For now, China still lags behind Taiwan, South Korea and the US.

These controls would essentiall­y bar exports of Americanma­de tools needed for high-end chip production in China, and of US tools or components to Chinese factories capable of making chips above or below a certain threshold.

The Commerce Department will also bar American factories, and Americans who work in foreign factories overseas, from providing support without a licence to the developmen­t or production of such chips for China.

The technologi­es fuelled by these chips were used for mass surveillan­ce and to enable human rights abuses, senior Administra­tion officials said.

National security adviser Jake Sullivan last month said the Administra­tion was seeking to shed the old approach of maintainin­g a ‘‘relative’’ advantage in key technologi­es to blowing open ‘‘as large of a lead as possible’’.

The Chinese embassy in Washington, DC called the move ‘‘sci-tech hegemony’’, accusing the Administra­tion of seeking ‘‘to hobble and suppress the developmen­t of emerging markets and developing countries’’.

 ?? AP ?? New measures by the US aim to make it harder for China to get advanced computer chips and chip-making equipment, in what is being called a new strategy of high-tech containmen­t by the Biden Administra­tion.
AP New measures by the US aim to make it harder for China to get advanced computer chips and chip-making equipment, in what is being called a new strategy of high-tech containmen­t by the Biden Administra­tion.

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