Trump warned by top Senate Democrats to rethink advanced AI chip sales to China
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Trump warned by top Senate Democrats to rethink advanced AI chip sales to China

August 16, 2025
06:39 PM
3 min read
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On Aug. 15, top Senate Democrats warned Trump about AI chip deal with China in an open letter

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investment

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August 16, 2025

06:39 PM

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CNBC

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stockssemiconductorstechnologymarket cyclesseasonal analysisgeopolitical

In this articleAMDNVDA your favorite stocksCREATE FREE ACCOUNTNvidia CEO Jensen Huang, right, speaks alongside President Donald Trump in America, at the White House in Washington, on April 30, 2025.Jim Watson | AFP | Getty ImagesSix Senate Democrats on Friday released an open letter asking President Donald Trump to reconsider his decision to allow giants Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices to sell AI semiconductor chips to China in exchange for 15% of revenue from the sales.The letter — signed by Senators Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.; Mark Warner, D-Va.; Jack Reed, D-R.I.; Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H.; Christopher Coons, D-Del.; and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. — was in response to an Aug. 11 announcement by Trump that Nvidia and AMD would pay the U.S. government a 15% cut of revenue from chip sales to China in exchange for export licenses."Our national security and military readiness relies upon American innovators inventing and ducing the best nology in the world, and in maintaining that qualitative advantage in sensitive domains

The United States has historically been successful in maintaining and building that advantage because of, in part, our ability to deny adversaries access to those nologies," the letter states."The willingness displayed in this arrangement to 'negotiate' away America's competitive edge that is key to our national security in exchange for what is, in effect, a commission on a sale of AI-enabling nology to our main global competitor, is cause for serious alarm," the letter continues.Senators also warned that selling advanced AI chips — specifically Nvidia's H20 and AMD's MI308 chips — to China could help strengthen its military systems, a claim that Nvidia denies.In a statement to CNBC, a Nvidia spokesperson said: "The H20 would not enhance anyone's military capabilities, but would have helped America attract the support of developers worldwide and win the AI race

Banning the H20 cost American taxpayers billions of dollars, without any benefit."A request for on the letter from AMD was not immediately returned.watch now6:0406:04Dylan Patel on China’s fight to secure Blackwell chips amid U.S. restrictionsSquawk Box AsiaThe Senate Democrats also requested a detailed response from the administration by Friday, Aug. 22, regarding the current deal involving Nvidia and AMD, as well as any similar arrangements being made with other companies."We again urge your administration to quickly reverse course and abandon this reckless plan to trade away U.S. nology leadership," the letter states.In response, the Trump administration appeared to brush aside the legislators' national security concerns."It's quite rich to see Democrats and irrelevant 'experts', who were totally MIA when Joe Biden's autopen administration let H20 chips and other advanced nologies freely flow to China, now pretend to care our national and economic security," White House spokesman Kush Desai told CNBC.Despite Trump allowing chip sales to resume, it has already become that China isn't welcoming Nvidia back with open arms, instead urging companies to avoid buying U.S. companies' chips, according to a Bloomberg report."We're hearing that this is a hard mandate, and that [authorities are actually] stopping additional orders of H20s for some companies," Qingyuan Lin, a senior analyst covering China semiconductors at Bernstein, told CNBC.In a separate report, The Information said regulators in China have ordered major companies, including ByteDance, Alibaba, and Tencent, to suspend Nvidia chip purchases until a national security review is complete.— CNBC's Kristina Partsinevelos contributed to this report