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US eases export controls on Nvidia AI chips to the UAE, granting licence-free access

The US government revised export control rules on July 10 to make it easier to export Nvidia AI chips, military equipment, and commercial satellites to the UAE without a licence, a significant loosening of the restrictions that have governed advanced chip transfers to Gulf states

人工智能·贸易· active 谁的钱·长远之局 ·5 视角 · ·rbtfl 更新 2026年7月11日
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报道分歧

同一条新闻,各国新闻编辑室如何讲述。引文均注明出处并链接原文。

UAE

Arabian Business

“UAE wins licence-free access to Nvidia AI chips as the US eases export controls.”

Gulf business press; led with the UAE's gain framing阅读原文 ↗

India

The Print

“The US makes it easier to export Nvidia AI chips and military equipment to the UAE.”

Indian news outlet; covered it as a US bilateral policy decision with security dimensions阅读原文 ↗

Middle East

Al-Monitor

“The US makes it easier to export Nvidia AI chips and military equipment to the UAE.”

Middle East specialist publication; contextualised within US-Gulf tech diplomacy阅读原文 ↗

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Summary

The US government revised its export control framework on July 10 to allow licence-free transfer of Nvidia AI chips, military equipment, and commercial satellites to the UAE, according to multiple news outlets including Arabian Business and Al-Monitor. The rule change is a significant loosening of the restrictions that have governed advanced semiconductor exports to Gulf states since the Biden-era chip rules. The UAE has been building one of the world's largest AI computing clusters through the G42-Stargate UAE programme; this rule change removes a step from future hardware procurement.

The split

UAE and Gulf business press (Arabian Business) led with the gain framing, headlining the UAE's new licence-free access. Indian press (The Print) and the Middle East specialist Al-Monitor covered it as a US bilateral policy shift with dual commercial and security dimensions. US regional wire outlets ran it straight. No Gulf Arabic-language original appeared in the feed.

By the numbers

  • 3 categories eased, AI chips, military equipment, commercial satellites
  • 0 licences now required for these categories in UAE transfers, per Arabian Business
  • 35,000 GB300 GPU systems, already licensed in earlier G42 Stargate deal, now on an easier procurement path

Why it matters

The UAE is among the most capital-intensive AI infrastructure builders outside the US and China. Licence-free access for Nvidia chips removes procurement friction for future expansions and sets a precedent other Gulf states and US-aligned Asian partners will cite in their own export control negotiations.

What to watch

  • Whether Saudi Arabia or other Gulf states receive similar licence-free treatment
  • How China responds, given ongoing US chip restrictions targeting Beijing
  • Whether the US Congress pushes back on any security grounds

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