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  • This, at first glance, is just a smartphone.

  • But once you know what's inside, it becomes clear

  • it's so much more than that.

  • What really changed everybody's view of this device

  • was what was at the heart of it,

  • the microprocessor that was designed and manufactured in China.

  • It's at the center of tensions

  • between the world's two biggest economies.

  • The phone, made by Chinese tech giant Huawei,

  • represents a breakthrough by

  • Beijing as it tries to escape Washington's controls on its access to technology

  • and establish a self-sufficient chip industry.

  • If those US controls had been successful,

  • then a smartphone as advanced as this

  • simply should not be possible without importing key components.

  • China now is more capable than ever

  • of building advanced technologies.

  • And it worried US officials

  • who are more concerned about advanced chips

  • going into military equipment than smartphones.

  • It left them wondering how exactly

  • did China do it?

  • US Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo's visit to Beijing

  • in late August was supposed to calm a standoff

  • that has set China and the US at odds with each other

  • on everything from geopolitics to trade.

  • Her department has spent the past few years making it harder for China

  • to buy or manufacture the advanced semiconductors

  • needed to fuel the upcoming technology revolutions.

  • US hawks say it's about restricting China's military capabilities.

  • The Chinese side say it's more to do with restricting the

  • nation's economic growth.

  • There is no room to negotiate

  • when it comes to protecting Americans' national security.

  • Her visit was quickly overshadowed by this.

  • The Mate 60 is made

  • to compete with Apple's iPhone.

  • But unlike the iPhone, the Mate 60

  • didn't get a splashy launch event.

  • Instead, it was quietly released for sale online.

  • It still managed to sell out within hours.

  • What it made the timing of that device look like was though

  • that Beijing was trying to send a significant signal to the US

  • to say, “Hey, look, you've taken all of these steps, you've tried to hold us back,

  • but here we are, this is what we can do.”

  • My colleagues in Asia commissioned what's called a teardown.

  • Literally, you pull the phone apart and then you point a microscope and other

  • pieces of technology at the innards of the phone.

  • During the process, we found out that

  • Huawei's new smartphone is powered by a self-designed chip

  • manufactured by SMIC.

  • SMIC is China's biggest chip maker,

  • a contract manufacturer that makes semiconductors

  • designed by other firms such as Huawei.

  • And that shows that the two companies are now making certain progress

  • in their semiconductor capabilities.

  • The chip industry distinguishes chips by referring to them

  • in nanometers or billionths of a meter.

  • That's about half the diameter of a DNA

  • double helix.

  • Basically, the smaller you can make a transistor,

  • the better you can make the capabilities of a chip.

  • If you're looking at Samsung's latest Galaxy or obviously Apple's iPhone,

  • these devices are going to be based upon chips that are using

  • three nanometer technology.

  • US export controls were aimed at keeping China's

  • tech capabilities 8 to 10 years behind the US.

  • But the Kirin 9000s chip found in the Mate 60 Pro

  • demonstrated that it may only be four or five years behind

  • the world's most advanced technology.

  • This chip was made with seven nanometer production and that

  • is a lot closer to where the industry is to the state of the art

  • than the US had been hoping.

  • So how did Huawei and SMIC pull this off?

  • In recent years, the majority of the world's

  • most advanced chips have come from here, Taiwan.

  • And there's one single company that makes most of them.

  • TSMC.

  • In the past, the Huawei unit HiSilicon was able to design

  • chips that it delegated TSMC to manufacture and import.

  • The US sanctions stopped that.

  • China does seem to be able to find its way to find alternatives

  • when there is a lack of Western technologies available.

  • The single most important piece of equipment

  • for making the most advanced chips is what's known as an

  • extreme ultraviolet lithography or an EUV machine.

  • It took decades to develop and each one costs more than $100 million.

  • They're able to etch patterns into chips as small as three nanometers.

  • Only one company in the world makes them,

  • the Dutch firm ASML.

  • ASML hasn't been allowed to export its EUV machines to China.

  • Never.

  • It has been allowed to export something called DUV,

  • a different type of technology, an older type of technology.

  • It was thought that by basically limiting them to that type of technology

  • that they'd never get beyond a certain stage.

  • What we've found and this chip would appear to indicate, is that actually

  • they were able to squeeze the capabilities of this DUV machinery

  • to get way more advanced lines in those pieces of silicon than the US had hoped.

  • Bloomberg reporting discovered that SMIC did

  • actually use some of these older DUV machines from ASML.

  • But the key question is whether it can produce the component

  • at scale and efficiently enough to make it cost effective.

  • In fact, the reason the handsets sold out may

  • have had more to do with supply, not enough chips, than demand.

  • It also means it may be harder to get to the next stage,

  • below seven nanometers.

  • I was obviously,

  • I don't know what the right word, upset,

  • you know, when I saw the Huawei announcement.

  • The only good news, if there is any,

  • is we don't have any evidence that they can manufacture

  • seven nanometer at scale.

  • On what's called the China hawk side of the equation, this is

  • the last chance that America has to cut off China

  • from access to advanced technology.

  • Some Republican lawmakers are now calling for the Biden administration

  • to cut off Huawei and SMIC from American technologies completely.

  • In the short term, there's likely to be a degradation of their capabilities.

  • But if you look at this from a long-term perspective, you've given them

  • every, every incentive in the world to go out and do it themselves.

  • China remains the biggest semiconductor consumer,

  • and if the companies like Intel and Nvidia loses this major market,

  • that means that they could generate significantly less revenue and

  • hurt their ability to continue to innovate and keep the US ahead of China.

  • Chinese spending plans on semiconductor

  • have been widely reported to be in excess of $100 billion.

  • That's three or four times the annual spending

  • of a major chip maker like TSMC.

  • Given that kind of capital, given that kind of patience,

  • there is a chance that they will get to advanced capabilities over time.

This, at first glance, is just a smartphone.

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