Federal News
Senators Urge Commerce to Strengthen AI Chip Export Controls
March 21, 2026
Senators Tom Cotton and Bill Huizenga have formally urged the U.S. Department of Commerce to enhance export controls on advanced artificial intelligence (AI) chips to prevent illicit smuggling and technology diversion, particularly to China. This call follows recent indictments and investigations revealing sophisticated smuggling operations involving companies such as Super Micro Computer and Singapore-based Megaspeed. The senators advocate for implementing provisions from the Chip Security Act, including location verification and anti-diversion technologies, to safeguard U.S. technological advantages and national security.
- The U.S. Department of Commerce, led by Secretary Howard Lutnick and supported by officials like Under Secretary Jeffrey Kessler and Assistant Secretary David Peters, is a key agency responsible for enforcing these export controls.
- Procurement professionals should anticipate potential updates to export compliance requirements affecting AI chip acquisitions and supply chain vetting.
- Contractors and vendors involved in advanced semiconductor manufacturing or distribution must evaluate their compliance frameworks in light of increased enforcement focus and possible new regulatory provisions.
- This development signals heightened scrutiny on technology exports, emphasizing the need for robust export control measures and collaboration with federal enforcement agencies.
Export enforcement is a notoriously challenging problem, and the various concealment methods demonstrated in past cases show the need for more modern, creative solutions.
— Senator Tom Cotton
Yes, there is chip smuggling, it is going onit is among our top enforcement priorities.
— David Peters, Assistant Secretary for Export Enforcement
Agencies
U.S. Department of Commerce, Senate Intelligence Committee, U.S. Department of Justice, Singapore authorities
Vendors
Super Micro Computer, Nvidia, Megaspeed
Locations
Sources
- Cotton, Huizenga to Lutnick: Stronger Export Controls of AI Chips is Needed · Cotton Senate · Mar 21