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US weighs letting UAE buy over a million advanced Nvidia chips

US weighs letting UAE buy over a million advanced Nvidia chips

Time of India13-05-2025

The Trump administration is negotiating a deal allowing the UAE to import over a million advanced Nvidia chips, bypassing Biden-era export limits. While aimed at boosting US tech ties and AI capacity in the Gulf, critics warn of national security risks and potential Chinese access through UAE-linked firms like G42.
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The Trump administration is weighing a deal that would allow the United Arab Emirates to import more than a million advanced Nvidia chips, people familiar with the matter said, a quantity that far exceeds limits under Biden-era AI chip regulations — and one that's raised concerns that American hardware risks ending up in China's hands.The deal, which is still being negotiated and could change, would let the UAE import 500,000 of the most advanced chips on the market each year from now to 2027, said the people, who asked not to be named discussing confidential conversations. One-fifth would be set aside for the Abu Dhabi AI firm G42, while the remainder would go to US companies building data centers in the Gulf nation, according to the people.One of those companies could be OpenAI, which may announce new data center capacity in the UAE as soon as this week, people familiar with the matter said.Over the lifetime of the deal, G42 could purchase computing capabilities equivalent to between 1 million and 1.5 million H100 chips, Nvidia's current best offering, the people said. That total is around four times more than G42 would have been allowed to buy under a Biden-era chip export control framework, known as AI diffusion that Trump plans to scrap, according to the people. It's on par with the number of chips needed to power a planned Meta Platforms Inc. data center in Louisiana that's so large it would cover a significant portion of Manhattan.All told, if the deal moves forward in its current form, it would mark a sea change in US policy toward AI development in the Middle East and specifically the United Arab Emirates, where US officials have long been wary of government officials' and private companies' ties to Beijing. It's unclear what national security conditions Trump officials have applied to the chip sales, the people said. Under President Joe Biden's administration, G42 agreed to divest from China's Huawei Technologies Co. to pave the way for a $1.5 billion Microsoft Corp. partnership that includes data centers in the Gulf nation.The White House didn't immmediately respond to a request for comment. Nvidia, G42, the UAE embassy in the US and OpenAI declined to comment. The New York Times previously reported some details of the discussions.President Donald Trump on Tuesday began a tour of the Middle East with a stop in Saudi Arabia, after which he will travel to Qatar and then the United Arab Emirates. The US is also considering an agreement to grant Saudi Arabia more access to advanced semiconductors a move that would boost the kingdom's AI ambitions.Trump could unveil the UAE chip accord during his visit there, the people said, while emphasizing that the details are still under active deliberation. Central to the conversations with the UAE is White House AI Adviser David Sacks, who spent several days there ahead of Trump's trip.As part of that visit, Sacks met with Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan — the UAE's national security adviser and brother of the country's president, who traveled to Washington earlier this year in part to press Trump officials for easier access to Nvidia chips. During Sheikh Tahnoon's March trip, the UAE pledged to spend $1.4 trillion on US tech, energy and infrastructure — something that aided its pitch to buy more American semiconductors, Bloomberg has reported.'US companies still have the best technology but we are no longer the only game in town; it is well understood that China is catching up fast,' Sacks wrote in a post on X about his meeting with Sheikh Tahnoon. 'The country that builds its partner ecosystem the fastest is the one that will win this high-stakes competition. Effective AI diplomacy is vital now more than ever.'Sacks' argument — that the US semiconductor lead over China is narrowing — is one that several company executives have made as they urged the Trump administration to rescind some Biden-era chip export controls.Prospects of a deal to expand the UAE's access to the most advanced AI semiconductors stirred objections among China hawks in Washington, who expressed concern that such an agreement would risk creating a path for Chinese entities to obtain sensitive technology.'Deals like this require scrutiny and verifiable guardrails,' Representative John Moolenaar, the top Republican on the House China committee, said in a post on X. 'We raised concerns about G42 last year for this very reason—and we need safeguards in place before more agreements move forward.'

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China calls the shots in Myanmar's civil war
China calls the shots in Myanmar's civil war

Hindustan Times

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  • Hindustan Times

China calls the shots in Myanmar's civil war

In March a 7.7 magnitude earthquake hit Myanmar, in which 3,740 people died. And yet the earthquake is not the main humanitarian crisis in that troubled country. Since Myanmar's military junta brutally took control in a coup in 2021, nearly 10,000 civilians have been killed. The UN estimates 3m have been displaced and over 2m are on the brink of famine. The economy has shrunk by a fifth, and is estimated to be around half the size of its pre-coup trajectory. All this has made Myanmar a hub of lawlessness in Asia. Illicit drug production, human-trafficking and a huge scam industry are booming. Much of the world has paid scant attention to Myanmar since the coup. Western countries, which did the most to encourage democracy there in the decade up to 2021, have been consumed with crises in Ukraine and Gaza. But China has not lost focus. It has taken advantage of the chaos next door to steal a march on its geopolitical rivals. Engaging both the junta and its opponents, China works to protect its varied interests in the country: ensuring stability along its border and along the lengthy trade routes leading to the Indian Ocean; protecting Chinese investments in the country; shutting down scam centres targeting Chinese citizens; and, above all, limiting Western influence. China's strategy has been a stunning success. Both the junta and resistance groups started out hostile to Chinese influence. But neither dares cross their larger neighbour now. Its control of trade in arms and other illicit goods puts it in a decisive position. One Chinese investment in particular illustrates the point. A 2,500km (1,500-mile) oil-and-gas pipeline begins on Myanmar's south-western coast and runs through a cross-section of the conflict to Kunming, the capital of China's south-western province of Yunnan (see map). Yet it remains entirely unmolested, with groups on both sides careful to avoid damaging it. Those fighting the junta are a ragtag group. Young people who survived attacks on counter-coup protests fled to the country's mountainous borderlands. They were trained and armed there by ethnic-minority armies, which have fought the government on-and-off for decades. Those new resistance fighters, who are mostly made up of the Bamar, the majority ethnic group, returned to the arid centre of the country known as the 'dry zone'. They now challenge the junta in its own backyard by attacking its convoys and operating their own schools and clinics. The junta responds through air strikes and search-and-destroy missions that often lead to the torture and execution of civilians. The insurgents have been joined by many of the ethnic armies based along the country's periphery. These can be divided into two camps. Some, like those along the Thai and Indian borders, have long looked to the West and tend to be more supportive of the Spring Revolution, as the hotchpotch of those resisting the military rule call their movement. Their own offensives have taken significant territory off the military. Other ethnic militias, including most groups along the Chinese border, have closer ties to China. Several have historical links with China's Communist Party, having emerged in 1989 from the Burmese Communist Party. They share an impatience with democracy and the West. Brothers in arms The first camp was quick to support the revolution, but their progress was slow. Those groups closer to China remained aloof from the fight at first, observing ceasefires with the junta. Then, in October 2023, a coalition of these China-linked groups known as the Three Brotherhood Alliance launched a surprise attack on junta positions in Shan State in the east, and a few weeks later, in Rakhine State in the west. Within two months they had handed the army a string of defeats greater than any since the years immediately following independence from Britain in 1948. It is probable that the Brotherhood's offensive was approved by China, which wanted to clear out scam centres trafficking Chinese citizens and targeting Chinese victims. After the Brotherhood accomplished these goals, China quickly pushed the two sides to sign a truce. But in June 2024 the Brotherhood groups broke the truce. One successfully assaulted the city of Lashio in Shan state and the junta's Eastern Operations Command. Never before had such a large city or military base been seized by rebels. Another of the Brotherhood groups started down the road to Mandalay, stopping just outside the picturesque hill station above the city, where the military's service academies sit. Fearing that these lightning offensives might cause a demoralised military government to collapse, China cut off trade with the Brotherhood. It cut electricity and water, too, and kidnapped one of the group's leaders. With great reluctance, the Brotherhood relented. The offensives came to a halt, and in April Lashio was handed back to the military. The regime was spared a battle for Mandalay. Myanmar's revolutionaries might be able to shrug off Chinese pressure if others were to provide more humanitarian assistance. But for much of the past four years Western countries' aid to pro-democracy groups has not met their needs. There has been no serious discussion of arming pro-Western groups. Humanitarian assistance is easier in legal terms, and would boost the groups by supporting their social role. But it has not been forthcoming: only 39% of the $1bn that the UN requested in humanitarian aid in 2024 was granted. With great difficulty, the United States' Congress appropriated $121m in additional cash for democratic groups. 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Thaksin Shinawatra, a tycoon and former Thai prime minister, has also led a drive to legitimise General Min Aung Hlaing, inviting him to summits at his grand hotel in Bangkok. These boosters ignore, however, the junta's parlous battlefield condition and the much greater levels of anger at the army than existed in earlier periods of army rule. Perhaps most promising is an effort tried out by Indonesia in 2023. That year its foreign minister at the time, Retno Marsudi, brought all four warring factions—the junta, the democratic resistance and both pro-democracy and China-friendly ethnic militias—to its capital for what are known as proximity talks. Each stayed at a different hotel, and Indonesian diplomats relayed messages between them. None of the groups was prepared to discuss the main matters then—and may not be willing to now, either. But if this war is to end at the negotiating table, it is a format that offers some chance of a resolution. 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Bodies of two Israeli-American hostages recovered from Gaza in Israeli military operation
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Indian stock market: 8 things that changed overnight ahead of RBI policy- Gift Nifty, Tesla shares, US-China trade talks
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Indian stock market: The domestic equity benchmark indices, Sensex and Nifty 50, are expected to open on a tepid note Friday, tracking mixed sentiment in global markets, and ahead of the Reserve Bank of India's monetary policy. Asian markets traded higher, while the US stock market ended lower overnight, with all three indices closing in the red. The RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra will announce the monetary policy decision later today. Economists expect RBI's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) to cut repo rate by 25 basis points (bps) to 5.75% from 6%, its third straight repo rate cut. On Thursday, the Indian stock market ended higher led by broad-based buying, with the benchmark indices gaining over half a percent each. The Sensex rallied 443.79 points, or 0.55%, to close at 81,442.04, while the Nifty 50 settled 130.70 points, or 0.53%, higher at 24,750.90. 'With all eyes now on the outcome of the upcoming RBI MPC meeting, the continued outperformance of rate-sensitive sectors such as banking, realty, and auto appears to be factoring in a 25 bps rate cut. However, the RBI's commentary will be crucial, given the mixed global cues amid a favorable domestic environment. We continue to recommend a focus on theme-specific opportunities while maintaining prudent position sizing due to the mixed market signals,' said Ajit Mishra – SVP, Research, Religare Broking Ltd. Here are key global market cues for Sensex today: Asian markets traded higher after a phone call between US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping improved sentiment. Japan's Nikkei 225 gained 0.14%, while the Topix rose 0.24%. South Korea's Kospi jumped 1.49%, and the Kosdaq rose 0.8%. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index futures indicated a lower opening. Gift Nifty was trading around 24,845 level, a discount of nearly 16 points from the Nifty futures' previous close, indicating a tepid start for the Indian stock market indices. US stock market ended lower on Thursday in choppy trade amid a slump in Tesla shares. The Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 108.00 points, or 0.25%, to 42,319.74, while the S&P 500 fell 31.51 points, or 0.53%, to 5,939.30. The Nasdaq Composite closed 162.04 points, or 0.83%, lower at 19,298.45. Tesla share price plunged 14.26%, Nvidia stock price fell 1.36%, Apple shares dropped 1.08%, while Advanced Micro Devices share price declined 2.44%. Brown-Forman stock price fell almost 18% and Procter & Gamble shares fell 1.9%. Tesla share price slumped 14.26% to close at $284.70 after the public feud between CEO Elon Musk and President Donald Trump intensified over the new US tax bill. Tesla stock price has fallen in four out of the last five sessions, and the electric vehicle maker has lost about $150 billion in value after Trump and Musk began their verbal war. US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping spoke Thursday, according to China's Foreign Ministry amid trade tensions between the two countries. Trump said on social media that the talks focused primarily on trade led to 'a very positive conclusion,' announcing further lower-level US-China discussions. The European Central Bank cut interest rates as expected but hinted at a pause in its year-long easing cycle. The ECB cut its key deposit rate by 25 basis points (bps) to 2%, its seventh consecutive reduction and eighth since June last year when it began lowering borrowing costs. The number of Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits increased to a seven-month high last week. Initial claims for state unemployment benefits rose 8,000 to a seasonally adjusted 247,000 for the week ended May 31, the highest level since last October. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast 235,000 claims for the latest week. Gold prices rose on Friday and headed for weekly gains. Spot gold price gained 0.3% to $3,361.36 an ounce. Bullion is up 2.3% for the week so far. US gold futures rose 0.3% to $3,384.40. Spot silver prices fell 1.2% to $35.71 per ounce, still hovering near 12-year high. (With inputs from Reuters) Disclaimer: The views and recommendations made above are those of individual analysts or broking companies, and not of Mint. We advise investors to check with certified experts before making any investment decisions.

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