Raimondo, what the hell are you doing? The United States chips are tossed, and China will come by i

Mondo Technology Updated on 2024-01-29

Title:

"Raimondo, what the hell are you doing?"The United States chips are tossed, and China will come by itself!

The topic of international relations and military dynamics has always been the focus of our blog. Today, I want to bring you an absolute hot spot, a chip war between China and the United States full of emotional entanglements!

First of all, if you are U.S. Secretary of Commerce Raimondo, how would you feel when you see China rising?This question naturally leads us to our topic today.

Recent reports reveal that the U.S. Department of Commerce is in discussions with Nvidia on whether to allow the delivery of ** artificial intelligence chips to China. This is not the first time that the United States has wavered in its China policy, and it will by no means be the last. As the world hegemon, the United States naturally wants to maintain its hegemony, but the problem is that hegemony cannot be maintained in words.

When the United States found that China was rapidly rising and approaching itself, they chose to comprehensively contain and sanction China, and the chip industry became their biggest card to contain China. However, the United States has found that there are only a few areas that can contain China, and high-end chips have become their biggest bargaining chip.

But unfortunately, the capriciousness of the United States on the issue of chip sanctions has led to a Waterloo for American chip companies in the Chinese market. The U.S. ban on chip exports to China has caused the stock prices of Nvidia, Intel, Chaowei Semiconductor and other companies to evaporate about $57.5 billion overnight. The United States thought that this would contain China's rise, but China's counterattack came swiftly and swiftly.

China announced the latest self-developed chips and installed them on the "Mate60" series of ** mobile phones, filling the market gap left by the US chip embargo. China's counterattack was silky smooth, almost seamless.

However, after more than a month of negotiation, the United States has found that chip export controls alone cannot have any substantial impact on China. As a result, Raimondo said not long ago that it was discussing to relax chip exports to China and earn the money back. This is really ironic, just 11 days ago, Raimondo was hyping up the "Chinese chip threat", claiming to prevent China from obtaining the most cutting-edge technology from the United States.

In the words of a netizen, Raimondo's statement is "not only to be that, but also to set up an archway". "One, three, five, Raimon, two, four, six, and less, and Sunday Raymond circle" has become a unique way to describe the tangled mentality of the United States.

The repeated jumps of the United States on the issue of exporting chips to China essentially show their tangled mentality in the current Sino-US relations. As the world's largest industrialized country and the only major industrial country in the world recognized by the United Nations, the question is "whether it is good or not", not "whether it is available".

Although the United States has repeatedly stated that it will not affect China's development, but seeing the rapid rise of China's chip industry, the United States is capricious and wants to resume chip exports to China and come back to make Chinese money. Even if the export of chips to China resumes, the United States is full of wariness of us, saying that it cannot allow the "most complex and highest processing power" artificial intelligence chips to China, in case China has the ability to train its cutting-edge AI models.

Actually, this attitude is a bit ridiculous. After all, China is too lazy to buy American chips, but the United States is still fantasizing about dumping low-grade goods on China. A spokesperson for China said that the US has abused export control measures and seriously damaged the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese companies.

In short, Americans love to toss, so let them toss. Regardless of whether the United States reopens its chip exports to China, China will no longer bother with the United States. We are now concentrating on the development of our own various chip industries, and the most important task is to make up for the last shortcoming in the industry. As for how the Americans perform, let him go, after all, if you don't brush up on your presence, you will really "be oblivious to everyone".

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