US Tightens AI Chip Curbs on China Amid Parallel Fentanyl Talks

US Senators Elizabeth Warren and Tom Cotton have co-sponsored the Chip Security Act to tighten controls on advanced American AI chips and prevent their diversion to China. The legislation directs the Commerce Secretary to implement chip security mechanisms to stay ahead of smugglers. Concurrently, US and Chinese officials met in Colorado Springs for drug enforcement talks targeting the illicit fentanyl and synthetic opioid trade. Both nations emphasized a shared commitment to disrupt chemical supply chains and illicit finance linked to these drugs.

Key Points: US Lawmakers Move to Tighten AI Chip Controls on China

  • New Chip Security Act introduced
  • Aims to prevent AI chip diversion to China
  • Bill requires enhanced chip security mechanisms
  • US-China held drug enforcement talks on fentanyl
  • Focus on disrupting chemical supply chains
3 min read

US lawmakers move to tighten AI chip curbs on China as drug talks follow

New US bill aims to prevent advanced AI chips from reaching China, as both nations hold drug enforcement talks focused on fentanyl supply chains.

"We have a responsibility to ensure our most advanced technologies do not end up putting American economic and national security at risk. - Elizabeth Warren"

Washington, Feb 18

US lawmakers moved to tighten controls on advanced American chips to prevent diversion to China and other countries of concern, even as Washington and Beijing held drug enforcement talks focused on fentanyl and synthetic opioids.

US Senator Elizabeth Warren, Ranking Member of the Senate Banking Committee, co-sponsored Senator Tom Cotton's Chip Security Act. The legislation aims to prevent advanced American chips from falling into the hands of China and other countries of concern by improving oversight of advanced AI chips and directing the Secretary of Commerce to require chip security mechanisms.

"We have a responsibility to ensure our most advanced technologies do not end up putting American economic and national security at risk. This bill is a commonsense fix to the long-standing challenges of chip smuggling, ensuring our export enforcement officials can stay one step ahead of smugglers," Warren said.

Cotton said: "We must do better at maintaining and expanding our position in the global market, while safeguarding America's technological edge. With these enhanced security measures, we can continue to expand access to US technology without compromising our national security."

The bill reflects growing bipartisan concern in Washington over technology transfers and export enforcement, particularly involving advanced AI chips.

As lawmakers advanced the measure, US and Chinese officials met in Colorado Springs for the Bilateral Drug Intelligence Working Group from February 10 to 12.

The meeting between US Drug Enforcement Administration and China brought together law enforcement, prosecutors, customs, border security, public security, financial supervision, and technical experts to advance cooperation against illicit synthetic drugs, including fentanyl.

"The shared, urgent, and life-saving priority to stem fentanyl and other synthetic opioids has been emphasized by both President Trump and President Xi," the DEA said.

Participants reviewed recent progress and agreed on "concrete next steps to disrupt chemical supply chains, prevent diversion, and target illicit finance tied to transnational criminal organisations."

The talks examined drug trafficking trends in both countries. They also addressed the impact of precursor chemicals on the drug supply, pill presses and related equipment, and the role of online advertising.

"Recognising the terrible human toll of synthetic drugs, in particular fentanyl, the United States and China are committed to working together, in line with the guidance from both countries' leaders, to save lives, protect communities, and uphold the rule of law," the statement said.

Fentanyl has been central to US efforts to curb opioid overdoses, which have claimed tens of thousands of lives annually in recent years. Washington has repeatedly urged Beijing to strengthen controls over precursor chemicals and illicit supply chains linked to transnational criminal groups.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
The fentanyl crisis is truly heartbreaking, and cooperation is essential to save lives. However, it's a bit rich for the US to demand help on drugs while actively trying to contain China's growth in every other sector. This "cooperate and contain" strategy seems contradictory. Hope the talks lead to real action that reduces the suffering of families affected by opioids. 🙏
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Vikram M
The chip curbs are a big deal. If China's access to advanced AI chips is restricted, it could create opportunities for other manufacturing hubs. India must position itself to attract some of that displaced investment and talent. Our IITs are producing brilliant engineers. We need the right policy environment to become a true tech powerhouse, not just a services hub.
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Sarah B
As someone who has seen the opioid crisis affect communities abroad, the drug enforcement talks are the more critical part of this story. Thousands of lives are at stake. Global cooperation to disrupt chemical supply chains is non-negotiable, regardless of other political tensions. This should be the priority.
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Rohit P
The US is right to protect its tech edge, but let's be honest, this will only make China double its efforts to become self-reliant. They did it with space and telecom. We in India need the same 'atmanirbharta' mindset for critical technologies. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
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Kavya N
A respectful criticism: The article frames this as a US national security necessity, but doesn't explore the potential global fallout. These curbs could slow down AI innovation worldwide and make technology more

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