INTERNATIONAL
Tightening the circuit on China: US chip-tracing tools and Malaysia’s semiconductor squeeze
Malaysia's chip exports face US trackers and tariff threats as Washington tightens control to block tech flow to restricted countries. - Adobe Stock/AWANI Design
The revelation by Reuters that the United States has embedded location-tracking devices in AI chip shipments to detect diversions to China has jolted Malaysia’s semiconductor industry.
AI Brief
What may sound like a Hollywood spy plot is, in fact, a sophisticated export-control measure that has existed in various forms for years.
Tracking technologies—whether embedded in packaging, server components, or even in the chips themselves—are not new.
They have long been part of U.S. efforts to monitor the movement of sensitive goods, especially those with military or dual-use potential.
In the world of export-controlled items, the practice of tracking is as old as the geopolitics of trust and suspicion. Decades ago, U.S. agencies quietly used similar methods to trace aircraft components, advanced manufacturing tools, and even certain categories of scientific equipment.
The rise of semiconductors as the ‘oil’ of the digital age has simply moved these techniques into a new theatre.
During Malaysia’s most recent trade negotiations with Washington, the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI) worked diligently to secure better terms for the country’s semiconductor exports.
One headline result was the reduction of U.S. tariffs from 25% to 19%—a hard-won achievement meant to keep Malaysia’s chip industry competitive. But behind that victory lay a delicate balancing act.
The United States made clear that its concerns went far beyond simple tariff schedules. Officials feared that Malaysian-manufactured chips, especially advanced AI processors, could be resold or diverted to third-party destinations outside U.S. approval lists. These destinations—whether in China, Russia, or other jurisdictions under American export control—represent a red line for Washington.
To bolster U.S. confidence, Malaysia even suspended its collaboration with Huawei on 5G infrastructure—no small move, given Huawei’s market dominance and the fact that China is Malaysia’s largest trading partner. The decision was a strategic concession, meant to signal alignment with American expectations under frameworks such as the U.S. CHIPS Act and The Clean Network project.
The recent Reuters disclosure changes the texture of this relationship. According to their sources, the U.S. has been embedding trackers in every box of high-end AI chips shipped from Malaysia and other production hubs.
These trackers allow U.S. authorities to detect when shipments go astray—whether they end up in a prohibited country, a sanctioned company’s warehouse, or an unauthorised military facility.
For Malaysia’s semiconductor sector, this is more than just a compliance matter. It is a new layer of scrutiny that sits alongside tariff conditions, export licenses, and supply-chain audits.
Now, the very products themselves carry the equivalent of a digital homing beacon, reporting their location back to U.S. monitors.
And the consequences are not theoretical. The U.S. is reportedly prepared to slap a punitive tariff of 45% on Malaysian semiconductor exports if any violation is detected—especially if those chips were supposed to be tariff-exempt under the latest trade deal.
This transforms compliance from a paperwork exercise into a high-stakes gamble: one faulty shipment, one distributor breach, or one grey-market sale could cost the entire sector dearly.
Washington’s move must be understood in the context of its broader technology containment strategy toward China. The U.S. is determined to prevent Beijing from gaining access to advanced semiconductors, which are critical to AI, quantum computing, and next-generation military applications.
From the tightening of the CHIPS Act to the expansion of export-control lists, the pattern is clear: every potential leak in the supply chain is to be sealed.
Malaysia’s role in this ecosystem is unique. As one of the world’s top destinations for semiconductor assembly, testing, and packaging, the country occupies a strategic niche between upstream chip design and downstream integration into consumer and industrial products.
That niche makes it an indispensable partner—and a point of vulnerability—in the eyes of U.S. policymakers.
The trackers now embedded in Malaysian shipments are, therefore, not just about preventing “smuggling” to China. They are about making Malaysia an extension of the U.S. enforcement apparatus. Whether Kuala Lumpur likes it or not, compliance with American rules has now been technologically hardwired into the trade relationship.
The economic implications are sobering. While Malaysia has benefited from being part of global semiconductor supply chains, the sector’s reliance on U.S. technology and market access means that political conditions can quickly become commercial risks.
If Malaysia’s semiconductor exports face a sudden 45% tariff, the shock would ripple through Penang’s electronics corridor, affect thousands of jobs, and deter future investment. Worse, such a penalty could undermine Malaysia’s positioning as a trusted regional hub for electronics manufacturing.
Politically, the surveillance element could become a point of contention in Malaysia’s relations with both Washington and Beijing. For the U.S., it is a tool to ensure compliance. For China, it is a reminder that Malaysia’s chip sector is increasingly aligned with American strategic priorities. Navigating this tension without alienating either side will be a delicate act—one that demands a clear, consistent policy on technology exports and national industrial strategy.
Malaysia’s Options
Malaysia cannot change the fact that U.S. trackers are now part of its semiconductor shipments. But it can—and should—take steps to protect its industry’s credibility and autonomy.
First, MITI and the Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA) must establish a robust domestic compliance monitoring system that pre-empts U.S. enforcement actions. This means tight vetting of customers, end-use verification, and supply-chain audits that go beyond U.S. minimum standards.
Second, Malaysia should use its role in ASEAN and platforms like the East Asia Summit to push for a regional dialogue on semiconductor supply-chain security.
By framing compliance as a multilateral standard rather than a unilateral American imposition, Malaysia can reduce the perception that it is simply enforcing Washington’s will.
Third, Malaysia must continue diversifying its semiconductor markets, not to undermine U.S. conditions, but to ensure that its economic future is not tied to the policy swings of any single power.
Conclusion
The U.S. decision to embed trackers in AI chip shipments underscores a broader truth: in the age of strategic technology competition, trust is enforced by hardware as much as by diplomacy.
For Malaysia, a country deeply embedded in the semiconductor value chain, the challenge is not just to comply with American rules—it is to preserve the sector’s viability under the weight of geopolitical rivalry.
Tracking technology may have been around for years, but in today’s tense climate, it carries new political and economic consequences. The task now is to ensure that Malaysia’s semiconductor industry remains both a reliable partner to the U.S. and a resilient pillar of the national economy, without becoming collateral in the tech wars of others.
Phar Kim Beng, PhD, is Professor of ASEAN Studies and Director of the Institute of Internationaliation and ASEAN Studies (IINTAS) at the International Islamic University Malaysia.
** The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the position of Astro AWANI.
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AI Brief
- US embeds trackers in AI chip shipments from Malaysia to monitor and prevent unauthorized diversion to restricted countries like China or Russia.
- Malaysia made strategic concessions including suspending Huawei collaboration to secure lower tariffs and align with US export-control expectations.
- Violations could trigger harsh penalties, including a 45% tariff, making compliance a high-stakes issue for Malaysias semiconductor industry.
What may sound like a Hollywood spy plot is, in fact, a sophisticated export-control measure that has existed in various forms for years.
Tracking technologies—whether embedded in packaging, server components, or even in the chips themselves—are not new.
They have long been part of U.S. efforts to monitor the movement of sensitive goods, especially those with military or dual-use potential.
In the world of export-controlled items, the practice of tracking is as old as the geopolitics of trust and suspicion. Decades ago, U.S. agencies quietly used similar methods to trace aircraft components, advanced manufacturing tools, and even certain categories of scientific equipment.
The rise of semiconductors as the ‘oil’ of the digital age has simply moved these techniques into a new theatre.
During Malaysia’s most recent trade negotiations with Washington, the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI) worked diligently to secure better terms for the country’s semiconductor exports.
One headline result was the reduction of U.S. tariffs from 25% to 19%—a hard-won achievement meant to keep Malaysia’s chip industry competitive. But behind that victory lay a delicate balancing act.
The United States made clear that its concerns went far beyond simple tariff schedules. Officials feared that Malaysian-manufactured chips, especially advanced AI processors, could be resold or diverted to third-party destinations outside U.S. approval lists. These destinations—whether in China, Russia, or other jurisdictions under American export control—represent a red line for Washington.
To bolster U.S. confidence, Malaysia even suspended its collaboration with Huawei on 5G infrastructure—no small move, given Huawei’s market dominance and the fact that China is Malaysia’s largest trading partner. The decision was a strategic concession, meant to signal alignment with American expectations under frameworks such as the U.S. CHIPS Act and The Clean Network project.
The recent Reuters disclosure changes the texture of this relationship. According to their sources, the U.S. has been embedding trackers in every box of high-end AI chips shipped from Malaysia and other production hubs.
These trackers allow U.S. authorities to detect when shipments go astray—whether they end up in a prohibited country, a sanctioned company’s warehouse, or an unauthorised military facility.
For Malaysia’s semiconductor sector, this is more than just a compliance matter. It is a new layer of scrutiny that sits alongside tariff conditions, export licenses, and supply-chain audits.
Now, the very products themselves carry the equivalent of a digital homing beacon, reporting their location back to U.S. monitors.
And the consequences are not theoretical. The U.S. is reportedly prepared to slap a punitive tariff of 45% on Malaysian semiconductor exports if any violation is detected—especially if those chips were supposed to be tariff-exempt under the latest trade deal.
This transforms compliance from a paperwork exercise into a high-stakes gamble: one faulty shipment, one distributor breach, or one grey-market sale could cost the entire sector dearly.
Washington’s move must be understood in the context of its broader technology containment strategy toward China. The U.S. is determined to prevent Beijing from gaining access to advanced semiconductors, which are critical to AI, quantum computing, and next-generation military applications.
From the tightening of the CHIPS Act to the expansion of export-control lists, the pattern is clear: every potential leak in the supply chain is to be sealed.
Malaysia’s role in this ecosystem is unique. As one of the world’s top destinations for semiconductor assembly, testing, and packaging, the country occupies a strategic niche between upstream chip design and downstream integration into consumer and industrial products.
That niche makes it an indispensable partner—and a point of vulnerability—in the eyes of U.S. policymakers.
The trackers now embedded in Malaysian shipments are, therefore, not just about preventing “smuggling” to China. They are about making Malaysia an extension of the U.S. enforcement apparatus. Whether Kuala Lumpur likes it or not, compliance with American rules has now been technologically hardwired into the trade relationship.
The economic implications are sobering. While Malaysia has benefited from being part of global semiconductor supply chains, the sector’s reliance on U.S. technology and market access means that political conditions can quickly become commercial risks.
If Malaysia’s semiconductor exports face a sudden 45% tariff, the shock would ripple through Penang’s electronics corridor, affect thousands of jobs, and deter future investment. Worse, such a penalty could undermine Malaysia’s positioning as a trusted regional hub for electronics manufacturing.
Politically, the surveillance element could become a point of contention in Malaysia’s relations with both Washington and Beijing. For the U.S., it is a tool to ensure compliance. For China, it is a reminder that Malaysia’s chip sector is increasingly aligned with American strategic priorities. Navigating this tension without alienating either side will be a delicate act—one that demands a clear, consistent policy on technology exports and national industrial strategy.
Malaysia’s Options
Malaysia cannot change the fact that U.S. trackers are now part of its semiconductor shipments. But it can—and should—take steps to protect its industry’s credibility and autonomy.
First, MITI and the Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA) must establish a robust domestic compliance monitoring system that pre-empts U.S. enforcement actions. This means tight vetting of customers, end-use verification, and supply-chain audits that go beyond U.S. minimum standards.
Second, Malaysia should use its role in ASEAN and platforms like the East Asia Summit to push for a regional dialogue on semiconductor supply-chain security.
By framing compliance as a multilateral standard rather than a unilateral American imposition, Malaysia can reduce the perception that it is simply enforcing Washington’s will.
Third, Malaysia must continue diversifying its semiconductor markets, not to undermine U.S. conditions, but to ensure that its economic future is not tied to the policy swings of any single power.
Conclusion
The U.S. decision to embed trackers in AI chip shipments underscores a broader truth: in the age of strategic technology competition, trust is enforced by hardware as much as by diplomacy.
For Malaysia, a country deeply embedded in the semiconductor value chain, the challenge is not just to comply with American rules—it is to preserve the sector’s viability under the weight of geopolitical rivalry.
Tracking technology may have been around for years, but in today’s tense climate, it carries new political and economic consequences. The task now is to ensure that Malaysia’s semiconductor industry remains both a reliable partner to the U.S. and a resilient pillar of the national economy, without becoming collateral in the tech wars of others.
Phar Kim Beng, PhD, is Professor of ASEAN Studies and Director of the Institute of Internationaliation and ASEAN Studies (IINTAS) at the International Islamic University Malaysia.
** The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the position of Astro AWANI.