TLDR:Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei warns financial interests are overriding national security in U.S. chip policy.The Trump administration approved Nvidia H200 chip sales to China, drawing sharp criticism from Amodei at Davos.Chinese labs are accused of using AI distillation attacks to steal and replicate American AI models at scale.Chip smuggling networks worth hundreds of millions prove export restrictions are working, Amodei argues strongly.Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, has publicly raised alarms over U.S. AI chip exports to China. He argues that financial interests are overriding national security concerns in Washington. Speaking at Davos and in other forums, Amodei called out both Big Tech and the government for allowing chip sales to continue. His warnings come as Chinese labs reportedly intensify efforts to acquire and replicate American AI technology.Money Is Driving U.S. Chip Policy, Amodei SaysAmodei has been a vocal supporter of stricter export controls on advanced AI chips. He believes Congress broadly agrees with tighter restrictions, yet action has stalled. His explanation is straightforward: the financial stakes are too high for those opposing the controls.The Trump administration recently approved the sale of Nvidia’s H200 chips to China. These chips are among the most powerful processors used in modern AI development. The U.S. collects a 25% cut from such sales, which critics say is short-term thinking.Amodei drew a sharp analogy to make his point. In a post shared by @_Investinq on X, he was quoted asking: “Are we going to sell nuclear weapons to North Korea because that produces some profit for Boeing?” That comparison reflects how seriously he views the chip export issue.The CEO of one of America's most powerful AI companies went on record.He called out the US government, Big Tech, and their money.This is not about regulation but rather about national security.Here's what Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, said and why it should terrify you.… https://t.co/938embkuSG pic.twitter.com/H86defzDzy— StockMarket.News (@_Investinq) March 1, 2026Nvidia has argued that restricting sales is ineffective because China will eventually build its own chips. Amodei challenged that position directly. He pointed out that China is still spending billions on smuggling networks to acquire American chips, which shows the embargo does work.China’s Efforts to Acquire AI Technology Go Beyond Chip PurchasesChina’s AI labs have not limited themselves to buying chips through official or smuggled channels. Anthropic recently accused Chinese labs of running large-scale model extraction attacks on American AI systems. OpenAI raised the same concern just weeks earlier.The technique used is called distillation, where a model is trained by repeatedly querying a more advanced system. This allows bad actors to replicate AI capabilities without building them from scratch. It represents a serious and growing threat to American AI leadership.Chip smuggling operations have also been well-documented. Authorities have uncovered processors hidden in prosthetic baby bumps and GPUs packed alongside live lobsters. These operations are reportedly worth hundreds of millions of dollars.There is now an open divide inside Silicon Valley over chip policy. Nvidia, led by Jensen Huang, is lobbying for continued open sales and has direct access to the White House. On the other side, Anthropic, OpenAI, Microsoft, and Amazon are all pushing for tighter controls. Amodei has framed the debate simply: whoever controls the chips controls the future of artificial intelligence.The post Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei Calls Out Big Tech and Washington Over AI Chip Exports to China appeared first on Blockonomi.