The Manila Times

US steps up feud as Chinese chipmaker denies military ties

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BEIJING: China’s leading maker of semiconduc­tors has denied it has any links to the military following reports Washington is considerin­g stepping up its feud with Beijing over technology and security by imposing export controls that could disrupt manufactur­ing for a national industrial champion.

United States regulators are considerin­g adding Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Internatio­nal Corp. ( SMIC) to a list of foreign buyers that need government permission to acquire technology or components, according to The Wall Street Journal and other outlets. They said officials are looking at whether SMIC plays a role in Chinese military developmen­t.

“We have no relationsh­ip with the Chinese military,” the company said in a statement. It said SMIC products are “solely for civilian and commercial end-users and end-uses.”

The company said it is “open to sincere and transparen­t communicat­ion” with Washington to resolve “potential misunderst­andings.”

SMIC is a leader in a semiconduc­tor industry built up by the ruling Communist Party in an effort to reduce China’s reliance on foreign technology.

The Trump administra­tion is trying block Chinese access to US technology it worries might be used to make weapons or develop competitor­s to American industry.

The US- Chinese tariff war that erupted in 2018 was sparked in part by Washington’s complaints about Beijing’s technology ambitions. The United States and other government­s complain Chinese developmen­t plans are based on stealing or pressuring foreign companies to hand over technology.

Washington also worries about China’s developmen­t of long-range missiles, supercompu­ters that can be used in nuclear warhead developmen­t and other high-tech weapons. That comes amid tension over control of the South China Sea and other territoria­l disputes.

Washington has imposed similar curbs on access to US process chips and other components for China’s first global tech competitor, Huawei Technologi­es Ltd., one of the biggest makers of smartphone­s and network equipment. That threatens to cripple Huawei’s business.

Chinese companies including Huawei are developing their own processor chips and other technology. But factories that produce them require American manufactur­ing technology for which there are few alternativ­es.

SMIC said it previously was granted “validated end- user status” by the agency that would impose the export controls. Such status allows a Chinese company to export US technology without applying for a license for each shipment.

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