Belangrijkste senaatdemocraten drongen er bij de Trump -regering op aan om nieuwe kunstmatige inlichtingen met Saoedi -Arabië en de Verenigde Arabische Emiraten opnieuw te bezoeken, en zeiden dat de uitgebreide verkoop van AI -chips aan de landen in het Midden -Oosten geavanceerde technologie aan China en Rusland het risico loopt, terwijl ze potentieel beperking van de beschikbare voorraden voor Amerikaanse bedrijven.
Agreements revealed by companies such as Nvidia Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. During President Donald Trump's trip to the region last week, the door opened for the golf countries to buy tens of thousands of advanced semiconductors when the administration went to repeat the rules of Biden-RA-Aer that hit the access to chips of the countries. The combined movements warned a group of Senate Democrats led by Elizabeth Warren and minority leader Chuck Schumer, jeopardized, endangering US national security and economic competitiveness.
“In summary, these announcements come down to a breathtaking recovery of export control restrictions that have contributed to maintaining the American technological lead to ensure that the United States wins the AI race and prevent our opponents from gaining access to our most sensitive technologies,” the senators wrote in a letter or Secretaries and Secreters Lutnick and Secreters wrote Lutnick and Secreters and Secretors Lutnick and the Lutnick Lutnick and Secretary and Secreters and Secretary Lutnick and the Lutnick Lutnick and Secretary and Secretary Lutnick and Satators and Secretary and Secretary Lutnick and Secretary and Secretary Lutnick and Satators and Secretary and Secretary Lutnick and Secretary and Secretary Lutnick and Statedick and Statedick and Stateard. Secretary of State of State State.
Since 2023, the US has limited the sale of advanced AI and half -guides to Saudi Aarabia and the VAE, part of a broader effort to prevent China from having access to forbidden American technology through intermediaries. Trump administration officials have negotiated with the Saudi and VAE governments about ways to illuminate some of those restrictions on advanced chips that the golf countries need to feed their ambitions to become regional AI hubs.
In their letter, the Democratic senators called to ensure that AI chips are concerned with Saudi Aarabia and the VAE contain enough crash barriers to prevent the leakage of sensitive technology to China and Russia. While the two Gulf countries are important regional partners, the legislators wrote, they have also had earlier commercial ties with Chinese entities, including Huawei Technologies Co., a maker of telecom equipment that has been the target of American policy makers on national safety problems for more than ten years.
Witte Huis spokespersons, the Commerce department and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not immediately respond to requests for comments. On Saturday, Lutnick greeted a new AI data center partnership with the VAE, and emphasized that security conditions should be met.
“Renewed, targeted investment is essential for the success of our country in this critical technology,” Lutnick wrote in a message about X. “Every advanced semiconductor data center in the VAE or abroad will only be authorized if they work with the data center exploiters approved by the government.”
Nvidia and AMD spokespersons did not immediately respond to requests for comments.
Companies announced their Middle Eastern projects in the same week that the Trump administration began the process of withdrawing the so-called AI diffusion rule that was launched under President Joe Biden. That measure, which created three accessmen for countries looking for AI chips, attracted intense opposition of American allies and companies such as Nvidia about the limitations that it placed on the chip -purchases of Nations. Trump officials of the administration can now be appointed their own approach that is expected to shift to negotiating individual deals with countries.
The Democratic legislators said that the diffusion rule had tried to prevent China and other opponents from acquiring AI technology – which can be used to make biowapons, perform cyber attacks and to keep widespread supervision. Trump “now undermines these checks recklessly,” they wrote.
Spokespersons of the Saudi and Vae -Ambassades did not immediately respond to requests for comments. Bilateral similarities that take shape between the US and the Saudi and Emirati governments would still contain facilities that are aimed at preventing the distraction from technology to China and Chinese AI companies remotely have access to facilities, reported Bloomberg.
Reservations among Senate Democrats repeated the concern of some Chinese Hawks within the Trump government that the deals that were unveiled in the Golf last week had insufficient measures to prevent American chips from taking advantage of China reported Bloomberg. Some high Trump officials also doubted the wisdom of sending large quantities of chips to each location outside the US, given the focus of the administration on maintaining the American dominance in AI.
Without adequate protection, the senators wrote, companies will be encouraged to move data infrastructure offshore to the highest bidder, which undermine projects in the US. Large -scale sale of advanced microprocessors for artificial intelligence projects in the golf region also risked American companies of semiconductors needed for their own projects.
“At a time when many American companies have to wait years to acquire advanced AI hardware, we find it deeply disturbing that the Trump administration gives priority to making our latest technology available for Saudi Arabia and the VAE,” wrote the legislators. In addition to Schumer and Warren, the other signatories were Senators Jack Reed, Mark Warner, Elissa Slotkin, Chris Coons, Chris van Hollen and Kirsten Gillibrand.
The Democrats call access to components for American companies as a concern at a time when investors are increasingly worried that the global structure of data centers, which caused a tight range, delays. If that delay is realistic, availability would quickly stop being a problem.
With the help of Ian King.
This article was generated from an automated feed from the news agency without changes in text.