Compute · Georgetown CSET
The National Security Case for Limiting China’s Access to Advanced U.S. Compute: Evidence from PLA Procurement Documents
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Emerging Technology Observatory.
Key facts
- This report examines thousands of Chinese-language open-source requests for proposal (RFPs) published by the People’s Liberation Army between January 1, 2023, and December 31, 2024
- Takeaways from CSET's Ongoing Analysis of the Chinese Military's AI Wish List
- On Wednesday, April 22, the House Foreign Affairs Committee will discuss a package of bills aimed at strengthening restrictions on China’s access to U.S. These bills constitute a small subset
- Sam Bresnick, Emelia Probasco, and Cole McFaul shared their expert analysis in an op-ed published by Foreign Affairs
Summary
Takeaways from CSET's Ongoing Analysis of the Chinese Military's AI Wish List. On Wednesday, April 22, the House Foreign Affairs Committee will discuss a package of bills aimed at strengthening restrictions on China’s access to U.S. These bills constitute a small subset of the dozens of related measures that have been proposed—but not yet passed—by this Congress. Many important questions underlie these policy debates, including those concerning economic trade-offs, China’s technological indigenization efforts, and the broader U.S.-PRC bilateral relationship, among others. To read the full blog, visit CSET’s Emerging Technology Observatory. This report examines thousands of Chinese-language open-source requests for proposal (RFPs) published by the People’s Liberation Army between January 1, 2023, and December 31, 2024.