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[CHEY at SCSP AI+Expo 2026] Advancing U.S. Tech Leadership in the AI Era: The Power of the Allied Semiconductor Ecosystem

2026. 05. 21

 

As global technological competition intensifies, the U.S. is prioritizing the onshoring of semiconductor manufacturing capacity. However, with hundreds of billions of dollars of private capital pouring into AI infrastructure, there is a growing consensus that fragmented, unilateral industrial policies are insufficient to secure sustainable global tech leadership in the current AI era. The generative AI revolution is not the product of a single nation or a few tech giants; rather, it is built upon a deeply interconnected global hardware ecosystem.

To examine these dynamics, the Chey Institute for Advanced Studies hosted a special session titled Advancing U.S. Tech Leadership in the AI Era: The Power of the Allied Semiconductor Ecosystem at the SCSP AI+ Expo 2026 in Washington, D.C., on May 8 (Friday). This session moved beyond a single-nation approach to diagnose the structural realities and strategic implications of the allied semiconductor ecosystem.

Panelists representing three critical pillars of the global value chain - demand/policy (U.S.), advanced foundry (Taiwan), and next-generation memory (South Korea) - convened to identify physical and structural bottlenecks and outline a unified policy approach. This issue brief summarizes the session’s core insights and offers policy recommendations for strengthening the technical cooperation in the allied semiconductor ecosystem.

Moderator:
Dan Kim (Chief Strategy Officer, TechInsights)

Panelists:
Mike Flynn (Senior Vice President and Counsel, Information Technology Industry Council - ITI)
Missye Brickell (Senior Director of Government Relations, TSMC)
Michael Mansour (Senior Director for Government Affairs, Semiconductors & AI, SK Americas)

 

Issue Brief by Minseung Kim

Program Manager, Global Affairs Team