Trump鈥檚 greenlight for Nvidia AI chips to China draws fire from lawmakers, former officials聽

WASHINGTON 鈥 US lawmakers and former officials on Wednesday questioned President Donald Trump鈥檚 decision to allow Nvidia to sell its second most powerful AI chips in China, arguing the move erodes America鈥檚 AI edge and threatens to electrify Beijing鈥檚 military.
The Trump administration on Tuesday gave a formal green light to China-bound sales of Nvidia鈥檚 H200 chips, putting in place a rule that will likely kickstart shipments of the H200 despite deep concerns among China hawks in Washington.
Matt Pottinger, who served as a senior White House Asia advisor during Mr. Trump鈥檚 first term, told a congressional hearing that the administration is on the 鈥渨rong track鈥 on AI and that its decision to allow the chip sales will damage its goal of winning the AI race.
Selling H200s to China 鈥渨ill supercharge Beijing鈥檚 military modernization, enhancing capabilities in everything from nuclear weapons to cyber warfare, autonomous drones, biological warfare and intelligence and influence operations,鈥 he said. 鈥淐ongress needs to put guardrails in place so that this mistake can鈥檛 be repeated,鈥 he added.
Some Republican lawmakers echoed his concerns, without explicitly condemning the policy change.
鈥淵ou cannot sell military-grade AI technology to China,鈥 Michael McCaul said, without referencing H200s specifically. 鈥淭hey steal so much intellectual property from this country but we don鈥檛 have to sell it to them.鈥
National security fears around Beijing鈥檚 access to American AI chips had prompted the Biden administration to bar sales of the prized semiconductors to China.
The Trump administration, led by White House AI czar David Sacks, has said shipping advanced AI chips to China discourages Chinese competitors – such as heavily sanctioned Huawei – from redoubling efforts to catch up with the most advanced chip designs from Nvidia and AMD.
Mr. Pottinger described that notion as a 鈥渇antasy.鈥
The regulations released on Tuesday specify that before being exported to China, chips must聽be reviewed by a third-party testing lab to confirm their technical AI capabilities.聽China also cannot receive more than 50% of the total amount of chips sold to American customers.
Nvidia will need to certify there are enough H200s聽in the US before shipping any to China.聽Chinese customers must demonstrate 鈥渟ufficient security procedures鈥 and cannot use the chips for military purposes.
At least one Republican lawmaker, Congressman Brian Mast, who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee holding the hearing, praised some guardrails contained in the regulations, describing 鈥渒now your customer鈥 provisions in the measure as 鈥渟ignificant.鈥
In contrast, Jon Finer, who served as deputy US national security advisor under former Democratic President Joe Biden, said the rules would create a sizeable new workload for the Commerce Department, which oversees export control policy, and would rely on Chinese buyers to make truthful statements about their own customers.
Democratic lawmakers were more explicit in their criticism of Mr. Trump鈥檚 policy shift.
鈥淚t鈥檚 truly like Trump is handing our opponents our coordinates in the middle of a battle,鈥 Democratic Congressman Gabe Amo said. 鈥淲hy are we giving up our advantage?鈥 he asked the panelists.
The White House and the US Commerce Department, which oversees export controls, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The Chinese embassy in Washington and Nvidia did not immediately respond to requests for comment. 鈥 Reuters


