Last month, President Donald Trump created a generational opportunity by bolstering America’s lead in artificial intelligence (AI) when he refused to negotiate selling China the crown jewels of U.S. technology: cutting-edge AI chips like Nvidia’s Blackwell.

That decision was crucial to keep the world’s most advanced chips out of China’s hands and ensuring that Silicon Valley—not Shenzhen—remains the center of the AI revolution. However, sustaining that lead will require stopping China from building its own versions of the very chips we refused to sell them.

In order to do this, we must close loopholes in U.S. export controls on the chipmaking tools needed to manufacture advanced AI processors. American and allied companies dominate the development of these multimillion-dollar machines ca

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