September 28, 2023
The Case for an Alliance of Semiconductor Producing Nations
Coordinating with allies and partners is a critical pillar of the United States’ semiconductor strategy. To date, the United States has engaged with allies and partners through a constellation of bilateral and plurilateral coalitions, including Chip 4, the Quad, the U.S.-India initiative on Critical and Emerging Technology (iCET), the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework, and the EU-U.S. Trade and Technology Council, among others. While a piecemeal approach works for some technologies, this approach does not work for technologies with a global supply chain, such as semiconductors. The United States needs to reboot its strategy and form an alliance of semiconductor-producing nations to foster geographic diversification of the necessary supply chains.
Revising the United States’ current approach is imperative given the global nature of the semiconductor supply chain.
The United States’ current two-pronged approach suffers from the Goldilocks problem. On one hand, the existing bilateral and plurilateral coalitions have too few countries in the room and lack visibility into segments of the value chain and the activities of key semiconductor producing nations. On the other hand, current multilateral dialogues have too many countries with a seat at the table. Broad-based initiatives – such as through the OSCE and WTO – make consensus impossible, as different stakeholders have different goals. The United States needs to strike a balance and find the middle ground in its approach, and an alliance of semiconductor-producing nations would do just that.
Read the full article from The Diplomat.
More from CNAS
-
The Eurasian Century: Hot Wars, Cold Wars, and the Making of the Modern World with Hal Brands
For more than 100 years, the continent of Eurasia has played a central role in global geopolitics. In the 20th century, numerous authoritarian powers from Germany under Kaiser...
By Andrea Kendall-Taylor, Jim Townsend & Hal Brands
-
Trump Wants a Nuclear Deal. Can He Be the Ultimate Negotiator?
Should Trump negotiate with Russia’s Putin, and what terms should he pursue if US and global security is to be enhanced?...
By Jon B. Wolfsthal
-
Trump Turning Washington Crash into ‘Bar Room Talk’ Will Turn People Away | Jim Townsend
Trump's unchecked claims that the DC crash was caused by diversity quotas should "turn people away" from him, says Jim Townsend, an adjunct senior fellow in the CNAS Transatla...
By Jim Townsend
-
Putin’s Fight Won’t End With Ukraine
In an essay for Foreign Affairs, titled “Putin’s Point of No Return,” Andrea Kendall-Taylor, senior fellow and director of the Transatlantic Security Program at the Center for...
By Andrea Kendall-Taylor