"In case you haven’t noticed, let me
alert you to a bracing turn of events: The U.S. is now in conflict with Russia
and China at the same time. Grandma always said, “Never fight Russia and China
at the same time.” So did Henry Kissinger. Alas, there is a strong case in the
national interest for confronting both today. But have no doubt: We are in
uncharted waters. I just hope that these are not our new “forever wars.”
The struggle with Russia is
indirect, but obvious, escalating and violent. We are arming the Ukrainians
with smart missiles and intelligence to force the Russians to withdraw from
Ukraine. While taking nothing away from the bravery of the Ukrainians, the U.S.
and NATO’s support has played a giant role in Ukraine. Just ask the Russians.
But how does this predicament end? No one can tell you.
Today, though, I want to focus on
the struggle with China, which is less visible and involves no shooting,
because it is being fought mostly with transistors that toggle between digital
1s and 0s. But it will have as big, if not bigger, an impact on the global
balance of power as the outcome of the combat between Russia and Ukraine. And
it has little to do with Taiwan.
It is a struggle over semiconductors
— the foundational technology of the information age. The alliance that designs
and makes the smartest chips in the world will also have the smartest precision
weapons, the smartest factories and the smartest quantum computing tools to break
virtually any form of encryption. Today, the U.S. and its partners lead, but
China is determined to catch up — and we are now determined to prevent that.
Game on.
Last week, the Biden administration
issued a new set of export regulations that in effect said to China: “We think
you are three technology generations behind us in logic and memory chips and
equipment, and we are going to ensure that you never catch up.” Or, as the
national security adviser Jake Sullivan put it more
diplomatically: “Given the foundational nature of certain technologies, such as
advanced logic and memory chips, we must maintain as large of a lead as
possible” — forever.
“The U.S. has essentially declared
war on China’s ability to advance the country’s use of high-performance
computing for economic and security gains,” Paul Triolo, a China and tech
expert at Albright Stonebridge, a consulting firm, told The Financial Times.
Or as the Chinese Embassy in Washington framed it, the U.S. is going for “sci-tech hegemony.”
But where does this war end? No one
can tell you. I don’t want to be ripped off by a China that is increasingly
using technology for absolute control at home and creepy power-projection
abroad. But if we are now locked on a path of denying China advanced
technologies forever — eliminating any hope of win-win collaborations
with Beijing on issues like climate and cybercrime, where we face mutual threats
and are the only two powers that can make a difference — what kind of world
will that produce? China should be asking the same questions.
All I know for sure is that
regulations issued Friday by President Biden’s Commerce Department are a
formidable new barrier when it comes to export controls that will block China
from being able to buy the most advanced semiconductors from the West or the
equipment to manufacture them on its own.
The new regulations also bar any
U.S. engineer or scientist from aiding China in chip manufacturing without
specific approval, even if that American is working on equipment in China not
subject to export controls. The regs also tighten the tracking to ensure that
U.S.-designed chips sold to civilian companies in China don’t get into the
hands of China’s military. And, maybe most controversially, the Biden team
added a “foreign direct product rule” that, as The Financial Times noted,
“was first used by the administration of Donald Trump against Chinese
technology group Huawei” and “in effect bars any U.S. or non-U.S. company from
supplying targeted Chinese entities with hardware or software whose supply
chain contains American technology.”
This last rule is huge, because the
most advanced semiconductors are made by what I call “a complex adaptive
coalition” of companies from America to Europe to Asia. Think of it this way:
AMD, Qualcomm, Intel, Apple and Nvidia excel at the design of chips that have
billions of transistors packed together ever more tightly to produce the
processing power they are seeking. Synopsys and Cadence create sophisticated
computer-aided design tools and software on which chip makers actually draw up
their newest ideas. Applied Materials creates and modifies the materials to
forge the billions of transistors and connecting wires in the chip. ASML, a
Dutch company, provides the lithography tools in partnership with, among
others, Zeiss SMT, a German company specializing in optical lenses, which draws
the stencils on the silicon wafers from those designs, using both deep and
extreme ultraviolet light — a very short wavelength that can print tiny, tiny
designs on a microchip. Intel, Lam Research, KLA and firms from Korea to Japan
to Taiwan also play key roles in this coalition.
The point is this: The more we push
the boundaries of physics and materials science to cram more transistors onto a
chip to get more processing power to continue to advance artificial
intelligence, the less likely it is that any one company, or country, can excel
at all the parts of the design and manufacturing process. You need the whole
coalition. The reason Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, known as
TSMC, is considered the premier chip manufacturer in the world is that every
member of this coalition trusts TSMC with its most intimate trade secrets,
which it then melds and leverages for the benefit of the whole.
Because China is not trusted by the
coalition partners not to steal their intellectual property, Beijing is left
trying to replicate the world’s all-star manufacturing chip stack on its own
with old technologies. It managed to pilfer a certain amount of chip
technology, including 28 nanometer technology from TSMC
back in 2017.
Until recently, China’s premier chip
maker, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Company, had been thought to
be stuck at mostly this chip level, although it claims to have produced some chips at the 14
nm and even 7 nm scale by jury-rigging some older-generation Deep UV
lithography from ASML. U.S. experts told me, though, that China can’t mass
produce these chips with precision without ASML’s latest technology — which is
now banned from the country.
This week I interviewed U.S.
Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo, who oversees both the new export controls
on chips and the $52.7 billion that the Biden administration has just secured
to support more U.S. research on next-generation semiconductors and to bring
advanced chip manufacturing back to the U.S. Raimondo rejects the idea that the
new regulations are tantamount to an act of war.
“The U.S. was in an untenable
position,” she told me in her office. “Today we are purchasing 100 percent of
our advanced logic chips from abroad — 90 percent from TSMC in Taiwan and 10
percent from Samsung in Korea.” (That IS pretty crazy, but it IS true.)
“We do not make in the U.S. any of
the chips we need for artificial intelligence, for our military, for our
satellites, for our space programs” — not to mention myriad nonmilitary
applications that power our economy. The recent CHIPS Act, she said, was our
“offensive initiative” to strengthen our whole innovation ecosystem so more of
the most advanced chips will be made in the U.S.
Imposing on China the new export
controls on advanced chip-making technologies, she said, “was our defensive
strategy. China has a strategy of military-civil fusion,” and Beijing has made
clear “that it intends to become totally self-sufficient in the most advanced
technologies” to dominate both the civilian commercial markets and the 21st
century battlefield. “We cannot ignore China’s intentions.”
So, to protect ourselves and our
allies — and all the technologies we have invented individually and
collectively — she added, “what we did was the next logical step, to prevent
China from getting to the next step.” The U.S. and its allies design and
manufacture “the most advanced supercomputing chips, and we don’t want them in
China’s hands and be used for military purposes.”
Our main focus, concluded Raimondo,
“is playing offense — to innovate faster than the Chinese. But at the same
time, we are going to meet the increasing threat they are presenting by
protecting what we need to. It is important that we de-escalate where we can
and do business where we can. We don’t want a conflict. But we have to protect
ourselves with eyes wide open.”
China’s state-directed newspaper
Global Times editorialized that the ban would only “strengthen China’s will and
ability to stand on its own in science and technology.” Bloomberg quoted an
unidentified Chinese analyst as saying “there is no possibility of
reconciliation.”
Welcome to the future…"
Has anyone noticed that now that the Chinese chip makers are getting the brunt of the sanctions, there is nothing stopping them from selling chips for Russian missile weapons. Anušauskas, where are you? You're not watching anything again, you're just picking on female students?
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