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Bloomberg News: US Trade Representative Greer says that chip export controls are not a major issue in China's talks with the US.

U.S. trade representative Jamieson Greer said in an interview with Bloomberg TV on Friday that U.S. controls on exports of semiconductor chips were not a main topic during discussions between Chinese officials and U.S. officials. These comments indicate that a breakthrough in selling Nvidia’s advanced H200 chip to China is still far off, despite Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s last-minute invite to U.S. president Donald Trump's Beijing visit this week. This was not the main topic of discussion during the bilateral meeting. We didn't discuss?chip export control at the meeting," Greer stated, adding that between "15 and 17" U.S. Chief Executive Officers were present at Thursday's summit between Trump and Xi Jinping.

Reports claim that the U.S. has cleared 10 Chinese companies, including Alibaba Tencent, and Bytedance to purchase?H200s. However, not a single H200 has been delivered. The Trump administration approved exports of H200s to China in December, and added additional conditions in January.

Greer said that China's decision to allow the import of H200 would be "sovereign?decision".

"They're fluid, right? They change with time. "It depends on the threats that you perceive, what is commercially available around the world, and what Chinese technology can do," Greer said.

"You want to strike a balance in terms of national security and protecting high-tech, while also ensuring that we benefit from overseas markets." These are the types of factors that were considered when deciding whether or not the Chinese would buy the H200.

Chinese AI firms like DeepSeek are increasingly claiming their reliance upon domestic chips. However, U.S. curbs on chip production continue to stifle Beijing's efforts to achieve self-sufficiency at a time when domestic fabs struggle to increase output.

In recent months, computing power shortages forced many Chinese AI models to restrict user access. However, Chinese policymakers worry about the deepening dependence on U.S. chip suppliers. They view this as a vulnerability in their supply chain.

Former Biden administration officials and hawkish U.S. legislators have claimed that China could catch up to the U.S. on frontier AI by selling "advanced AI" chips. This would also advance China's militaristic ambitions.

"They make their own decisions." Greer said that they were "very committed" to?domestic?production.

They often view U.S. high-tech as a threat because, if we are ahead of the curve like we are with AI chips on some occasions, they may feel that this can hinder their own growth.

(source: Reuters)