I thought the entire point was the JP/NL export restrictions were a concession to the US to stop further restrictions.
I wonder if something is going on. The US has been able to stifle any talk they don't like. There are so many articles out there now questioning if sanctions work in general. Admitting that US sanctions are not doing what they went meant for goes against the narrative. There's an article from the Washington Post where it talks about the majority of sanctions the US has around the world are meaningless and are just symbolic and they still continue out of ego and that's why the majority of sanctions have never been repealed. I was reading how YouTube demonetizes any channel that shows video footage of Iron Dome in Israel not working against Hezbollah missile attacks on Israel. That shows you how much they want to control information in the US. So to admit that US tech companies not being able to recover without China being a customer is significant. Before they pretty much stifled or spun news of US companies having to lay-off workers where in China that would used as a sign that their sanctions are working and China is collapsing.
But shockingly one side wasn't negotiating in good faith.
Even if they are gloating about this, they know if they push it too far, companies would take the active step of designing US IP out of their future products.The U.S. has been trying to add more restrictions to that agreement and also to get South Korea and Germany to join the coalition, sources said.
The new rule, currently in draft form, shows how Washington is seeking to keep up pressure on China's burgeoning semiconductor industry without antagonizing allies.
"They're being cautious in using the rule because it makes our allies very uneasy," said James Lewis, a researcher at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. "There's only so far you can push this without people jumping off the ship."
"The U.S. isn't going to give up on restricting technology to China," Lewis added. "The Europeans got a temporary pass. (Other) countries got a temporary pass.
But the rule is "like a promise that we'll keep coming back at this," he said.
