The chip challenge: Keeping Western semiconductors out of Russian
weapons
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[April 01, 2022] By
Jane Lanhee Lee
OAKLAND, Calif. (Reuters) - When Silicon
Valley chipmaker Marvell learned that one of its chips was found in a
Russian surveillance drone recovered in 2016, it set out to investigate
how that came to be.
The chip, which costs less than $2, was shipped in 2009 to a distributor
in Asia, which sold it to another broker in Asia, which later went out
of business.
“We couldn’t trace it any further,” Marvell Technology Group Ltd Chief
Operations Officer Chris Koopmans said in a recent interview.
Years later, it reappeared in the drone recovered in Lithuania.
Marvell’s experience is one of a myriad of examples of how chipmakers
lack ability to track where many of their lower-end products end up,
executives and experts said. That could stymie the enforcement of new
U.S. sanctions designed to halt the export of U.S. technology into
Russia.
While higher-end sophisticated chips that can build supercomputers are
sold directly to companies, lower-cost commodity ones that might just
control the power often go through several resellers before they end up
in a gadget.
The global chip industry is expected to ship 578 billion chips this
year, 64% of them “commodity” chips, said TechInsights’ chip economist
Dan Hutcheson.
While Russia accounted for less than 0.1% of global chip purchases
before the sanctions, according to the World Semiconductor Trade
Statistics organization, new Western sanctions underscore the threat in
human terms.
“All those drones we've seen were not armed,” said Damien Spleeters,
deputy director of operations at the European Union- and Germany-funded
Conflict Armament Research group, which found the chips in the drones.
“Some of these drones that we have documented, like the Forpost, are now
used in their armed version in the current conflict” in Ukraine, he
said.
The report that prompted Marvell’s tracking work published late last
year by the Conflict Armament Research also found chips in Russian
drones from Intel, NXP, Analog Devices, Samsung Electronics, Texas
Instruments, and STMicroelectronics.
Texas Instruments and STMicroelectronics did not reply to Reuters for
comment; NXP and Analog Devices said they comply with sanctions; Intel
said it’s against its products being used for human rights violations;
and Samsung said it does not make chips for military purposes.
Military weapons such as drones, guided missiles, helicopters, fighter
jets, vehicles and electronic warfare equipment all need chips and
experts say they often use older chips that are well tested out. Now,
under new U.S. sanctions even some of the most basic chips cannot be
shipped to prohibited Russian entities.
For the most sensitive chips, controlled under the International Traffic
in Arms Regulations, the U.S. company selling them can be held
responsible if the chip ends up with an entity on the U.S. banned list,
said Daniel Fisher-Owens, a specialist on chips and export control and
at law firm Berliner Corcoran & Rowe.
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A general view of the video unit motherboard of a
Russian-manufactured drone, documented by Conflict Armament Research
on May 11, 2019, and obtained by Reuters on March 31, 2022, in Kyiv,
Ukraine. CONFLICT ARMAMENT RESEARCH/Handout via Reuters
‘LIKE THE DRUG BUSINESS’
Figuring out where chips go is like tracking the flow of narcotics,
experts say.
“It’s like the drug business,” said James Lewis, director of the
technology policy program at Washington-based Center for Strategic and
International Studies. “There's cutouts. There's middlemen. There's
money laundering … There's a black market distribution network.”
The point of the Russian sanctions, Lewis said, isn’t to track every
chip, but to disrupt their supply chain, which the intelligence
community has been working on.
Finding a solution could take creative technical approaches.
"Knowing where the chips go is probably a very good thing. You could for
example, on every chip put in essentially a public private key pair,
which authenticates it,” and allows it to work, Eric Schmidt, the former
Google chairman, told Reuters in a recent interview, discussing high-end
processors.
Marvell says it has a growing number of products supporting
fingerprinting and tracing, and is working with industry partners and
customers to advance this area. The Global Semiconductor Alliance has
proposed its members work on building a “Trusted IoT Ecosystem Security”
https://www.gsaglobal.org/iot/ties to tag and trace chips, said Tom
Katsioulas, technology executive at the industry group.
That may be a lot harder to do for a $2 chip, without making it
prohibitively expensive. The answer could be a matter of manufacturing
process, regulation and, perhaps, will.
“Ironically, the technology to do this, all of the things that we've got
in there, the blockchain, the IDs in the device, this has all been done
before for other applications,” said Michael Ford an executive at Aegis
Software who is working with the industry standards group IPC for better
supply chain security. “All that is needed is that catalyst to make it
happen.”
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could be that catalyst, he said.
(Reporting By Jane Lanhee Lee; additional reporting by Paresh Dave and
Alexandra Alper; editing by Peter Henderson and Nick Zieminski)
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