The New Silicon Iron Curtain The geopolitical struggle for artificial intelligence dominance relies on physical hardware rather than software. A new technological Cold War now divides the global economy, with the United States and China drawing a hard digital border. At the center of this battle stands ASML Holding N.V., the Dutch lithography giant currently facing intense American pressure over its trade relationships. The Monopoly of Lithography Modern chip manufacturing relies entirely on extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography. No other company globally replicates the technology engineered by ASML. These machines print microscopic circuits onto silicon wafers. Without them, fabrication plants cannot produce the advanced semiconductors that power next-generation military hardware and generative AI models. If China acquired this equipment, the strategic technological gap between Washington and Beijing would shrink instantly. Washington Escalates the Technological Cold War The Pentagon recently expanded blacklists targeting Chinese firms linked to the People's Liberation Army. American officials worry that critical lithography equipment has slipped through export controls. This anxiety drives Washington to pressure European allies and private corporations to sever Chinese supply lines. Severe Export Cracks Loom for Global Tech The current friction represents merely the opening phase of a broader regulatory assault. Analysts expect tighter export restrictions on semiconductor manufacturing equipment. Global supply chains will fracture further as national security priorities override free-market economics, forcing multinational corporations to choose sides.
PLA
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Jun 2026 • 1 videos
High activity month for PLA. The Prof G Pod – Scott Galloway among the most active voices, with 1 videos across 1 sources.
Jun 2026
- Jun 26, 2026