President Trump's decision to allow Nvidia Corp (NVDA) to sell its H200 artificial intelligence chips to China has sparked sharp criticism from an unexpected voice: former UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who argues the move could fundamentally shift the global AI balance of power.
Why the H200 Matters More Than You'd Think
In a column for The Times shared on X over the weekend, Sunak pushed back against treating this as a modest compromise. Sure, the more advanced Blackwell chips remain off limits, but don't be fooled by that distinction.
The H200 is orders of magnitude more powerful than anything China could previously import, and it outperforms what Chinese chipmakers are expected to produce anytime soon. That's not a small gap.
"The significance of this decision should not be underestimated… It substantially increases the chance of China catching up with the West in the AI race, and then swiftly overtaking it," Sunak wrote.
Export Controls Were Actually Working
Sunak's central argument is that chip export restrictions, while imperfect, had been doing their job. America's biggest advantage in the AI race has always been its lead in advanced semiconductor technology. That edge, he argues, just got considerably smaller.
He pointed to DeepSeek, one of China's leading AI companies, which has been remarkably candid about its biggest problem: limited access to Nvidia chips. When your competitor tells you exactly what's holding them back, handing them that resource seems like an interesting strategic choice.
The Security Problem Nobody Should Ignore
Sunak also took aim at the idea that Chinese tech companies operate independently from the state. Beijing's civil-military fusion strategy explicitly blurs those lines, making any separation largely artificial.
It's "naive," he said, to assume chips sold for commercial purposes won't end up supporting surveillance systems or military applications. When the state has that level of integration with private enterprise, the distinction between commercial and military use becomes pretty theoretical.
Trade Politics Over Long-Term Strategy
Sunak suggested Trump's calculus here is driven more by immediate trade concerns than strategic thinking. The president, he argued, is trying to smooth relations with Beijing ahead of U.S. midterm elections.
"A world where Beijing dominates both tech and manufacturing," Sunak wrote, would pose serious problems for open, democratic societies.
Beijing's Own Complicated Relationship With These Chips
The situation gets even more interesting when you consider Beijing's response. Earlier reports indicated China was actually considering restricting access to Nvidia's H200 chips domestically. That was followed by the arrest of two Chinese nationals accused of illegally smuggling Nvidia chips into the country, violating U.S. export rules.
Meanwhile, Futurum CEO Daniel Newman has argued that China's best shot at staying competitive in AI depends heavily on access to Nvidia's technology. So Beijing simultaneously wants to control these chips domestically while needing them desperately for its AI ambitions. It's a tension that reveals just how critical this technology really is.
The debate ultimately comes down to whether short-term trade considerations are worth potentially accelerating a competitor's progress in what many view as the defining technology race of this era.




