US clears export of 70,000 advanced AI chips to UAE and Saudi Arabia

UCapital Media
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The U.S. government has approved the sale of tens of thousands of advanced AI chips to the UAE and Saudi Arabia, signaling a major strategic shift that ties American tech power more closely to the Gulf’s fast-growing digital ambitions.
The Biden administration has authorized the export of up to 70,000 advanced AI chips to companies in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, marking a significant change in U.S. technology policy toward the region. The approval covers high-performance AI servers powered by Nvidia and equivalent U.S. technologies that were previously restricted under national-security controls.
Washington aims to strengthen strategic and economic cooperation with Gulf states that are investing aggressively in artificial intelligence, cloud infrastructure, and sovereign data-center networks. Market analysts say the greenlight could generate multi-billion-dollar revenues for U.S. chipmakers and expand American influence in one of the world’s fastest-rising technology hubs.
The export authorization comes with strict conditions: the chips must meet defined technical limits, and U.S. authorities will monitor compliance to prevent diversion to sanctioned countries. Critics warn the shift could intensify global competition over AI capabilities, while supporters view it as a pragmatic move to ensure U.S. leadership in the sector.
The decision underscores Washington’s recalibrated approach — blending geopolitical strategy with tech-driven economic expansion in the Middle East.
