Biden aiding and abetting China

Ed Morrissey:

Just last month, Congress spent a lot of money in the CHIPS Act to enhance America’s technological advantage over China. Forbes called the $280 billion bipartisan measure “a boon for American innovation,” not to mention “a win for the supply chain, too.” Two weeks ago, Chuck Schumer pitched the bill as a means to stay ahead of China’s investment in technology:

“Gonna be thousands and thousands of new jobs at the second chip fab in Malta, they have orders already till 2026,” Schumer said. “If you could think of what you wanted to locate here, to create good paying jobs, the new chip fab is at the top of the list to create prosperity. And it’s going to mean thousands. And these are union jobs, both union construction jobs, and additional jobs in the fab.But then there is also the NSTC, the National Semiconductor Technology Center. For the United States to remain number one in the world, we have to be at the front of the line when it comes to research. And the federal government has determined there should be one national center to lead that research.” …

“Our researchers are the best in the world dollar for dollar, we do better than the Chinese person for person, we do better than the Chinese,” Schumer said. “But if they’re putting $30 billion into this, and we put a billion which is what was happening before, they’re gonna get ahead of us. So we will stay ahead of China. Once this bill is signed into law, which it will be in the next few days, the president was going to do it this week, but COVID got in the way.”

In order to make this work in improving our competitive position against China, simply spending money on facilities won’t cut it. China gets much of its technological gain through its trade, where high-tech exports to Beijing offer lots of opportunities for manipulating the ingenuity of the West and especially the US to China’s benefit. If we don’t control exports to China in a way that restricts their access to American technology, then big chunk of that $280 billion going to subsidize innovation is likely to end up benefiting China on the cheap.

The Biden administration surely realizes this and is restricting exports to China accordingly, right? Right? Er … nopereports the Wall Street Journal today. And the risks go well beyond the commercial as a result:

The U.S. has identified intensifying technological competition with China as a top national-security threat. But a Commerce Department-led process that reviews U.S. tech exports to the country approves almost all requests and has overseen an increase in sales of some particularly important technologies, according to an analysis of trade data.

Of the U.S.’s total $125 billion in exports to China in 2020, officials required a license for less than half a percent, Commerce Department data shows. Of that fraction, the agency approved 94%, or 2,652, applications for technology exports to China. The figures omit applications “returned without action,” meaning their outcomes were uncertain.

The result: The U.S. continues to send to China an array of semiconductors, aerospace components, artificial-intelligence technology and other items that could be used to advance Beijing’s military interests.

Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) took notice of the report and drew the most dire connection to American security:

Biden's trade policies are as counterproductive as his energy policies and they are a gift to Chian. I get the impression that the millions Chian has provided to deals with Hunter where he got a 10 % cut may be the reason for these bad deals for the US.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Should Republicans go ahead and add Supreme Court Justices to head off Democrats

29 % of companies say they are unlikely to keep insurance after Obamacare