In a move that signals a major shift in global technology diplomacy, the US Commerce Department has authorised the export of advanced American semiconductor chips to state-linked AI firms in the United Arab Emirates and
Saudi Arabia. This breakthrough reflects deepening ties between Washington and Gulf tech powerhouses.
Announced in November 2025 but gaining fresh attention in early 2026, the decision allows UAE’s G42 and Saudi Arabia’s Humain to purchase up to 35,000 Nvidia Blackwell-class chips each. These processors are among the most powerful that are currently available for artificial intelligence applications.
The approval is part of a broader “Compute Diplomacy” strategy under the second Trump administration, which seeks to knit the Gulf into the US-led ecosystem of AI development and secure long-term partnerships in cutting-edge technology.
Why the US decision to authorise chips for the UAE and Saudi Arabia matter globally
For more than a decade, advanced semiconductors, especially those used to power AI, have been tightly controlled by export regulations in Washington, with concerns focused on preventing sensitive technology from reaching rival states or being used in ways contrary to US security interests. This latest approval indicates a significant recalibration of US export policy.
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The Gulf nations are now being recognised not only as oil and energy partners but as trusted hubs for large-scale compute infrastructure, capable of hosting powerful AI systems and collaborating on future digital innovation. Although the initial shipment size, 35,000 units per company, is modest compared with the roughly half-million chips needed for just one gigawatt of compute, the authorisation establishes the regulatory pathway for far larger deployments in the future.
US authorised chips for the UAE and Saudi Arabia boost Gulf AI ambitions
In the UAE, the approval accelerates projects such as the Stargate UAE AI campus, a massive computing hub planned in partnership with global tech firms including Oracle, Cisco, AMD and Nvidia itself. Local leaders have described the US clearance as a “pivotal moment” that confirms the UAE’s role as a secure, high-performance data centre location outside the traditional US and Asian tech corridors.