Jordan Schneider delivers a startling diagnosis: while Washington debates the optics of trade wars, the legislative branch is quietly moving to make semiconductor export controls permanent, stripping future presidents of the power to reverse course. This isn't just another policy update; it is a structural shift that could lock in a technological blockade against China regardless of who sits in the Oval Office or how diplomatic tides turn.
The End of Executive Whimsy
Schneider's central thesis hinges on the stagnation of the executive branch. He notes that since late 2024, the administration has been "reticent to update controls and has even considered walking them back," creating a vacuum that Congress is now rushing to fill with the MATCH Act. The author argues this legislation represents a fundamental transfer of power: "If passed, the MATCH Act would serve as the legislative branch's first major attempt to enshrine export control into law, a prerogative that has traditionally been the purview of the executive branch and its agencies." This move effectively removes the ability of any future administration to pivot toward engagement or leverage chip sales for diplomatic gains.
The bill's mechanism is blunt. It doesn't just maintain current restrictions; it demands total harmonization with allies, specifically targeting the servicing gap that has allowed Chinese fabs to keep running. Schneider writes, "Currently, both the Netherlands and Japan allow their companies to service equipment in Chinese fabs, regardless of whether or not that equipment would now be considered prohibited for sale." This loophole is the critical weak point the legislation aims to seal. If allies refuse to close it within 150 days, the U.S. threatens to invoke the Foreign Direct Product Rule (FDPR) unilaterally.
The gravity of this rule is immense: if passed, no future presidential administration could unilaterally turn back the clock on these controls.
This framing is compelling because it treats export controls not as a temporary bargaining chip, but as a permanent fixture of national strategy. However, one might question whether such rigidity serves long-term interests. By removing the ability to adjust policy based on changing realities, the U.S. risks creating a brittle system that cannot adapt if China achieves a breakthrough or if global supply chains fracture in unexpected ways.
The Maintenance Trap and Historical Echoes
The most technical yet devastating part of Schneider's analysis focuses on the human element of machine maintenance. He argues that stopping sales is only half the battle; preventing repairs is what truly kills production. "Maintenance and service for advanced lithography and etching tools is not an annual checkup but rather an involved and constant process," he explains, noting that without engineers from companies like ASML or Tokyo Electron, China's most advanced facilities could grind to a halt within a year.
This strategy carries significant geopolitical risk. Schneider draws a sharp parallel to the Reagan administration's 1982 attempt to block the Soviet gas pipeline, an action that "resulted in Western European nations commanding European companies to resume work" after they felt their sovereignty was violated by American extraterritoriality. While Schneider suggests the current context is different—arguing that banning equipment sales threatens economic interests rather than national survival—the threat of seizing assets or cutting off technology access remains a nuclear option in diplomatic relations.
Critics might note that assuming Chinese engineers cannot adapt to maintain their own machines is a gamble. As Schneider himself concedes, "Chinese Engineers Can Do the Job." The field service engineers working for ASML and Tokyo Electron are often locals who will not pack up and leave. If the companies withdraw, these skilled workers could simply be hired by Chinese firms at a premium, potentially accelerating indigenous innovation rather than stalling it.
In theory, without the expertise of ASML and TEL engineers to replenish parts and fix tools, China's most advanced fabs may grind to a halt.
This point underscores the high stakes. If the U.S. miscalculates the resilience of Chinese engineering talent or the availability of third-party parts, the MATCH Act could backfire by forcing Beijing to rapidly develop its own supply chain for maintenance and components, much like how sanctions on the Yamato's era predecessors forced Japan to innovate under pressure.
A New Dynamic in Foreign Policy
Perhaps the most profound implication Schneider identifies is the shift in who holds the leash. He observes that "Congress would be providing convenient cover to the executive branch," allowing the White House to blame Washington for hardline policies it might otherwise hesitate to enforce. This dynamic mirrors past legislative battles, yet the permanence of the MATCH Act suggests a departure from the flexible, negotiation-heavy approach of previous decades.
The author highlights how this removes leverage from the table entirely. "Their hands are tied, and they can't do anything to reverse it; no amount of leverage or negotiation can change it," Schneider writes regarding China's position. This creates a scenario where the U.S. effectively declares that certain technological frontiers are permanently off-limits, regardless of future geopolitical shifts.
Congress is establishing the minimum expectation for SME controls... Regardless of whether we sell China advanced chips or bargain with other leverage, the tools to make those advanced chips would officially be off the table for future administrations.
While this provides clarity and reduces the risk of sudden policy reversals, it also eliminates the possibility of using chip access as a carrot in broader negotiations. The U.S. is betting that a permanent blockade is worth the potential long-term alienation of allies who may feel coerced into compliance.
Bottom Line
Schneider's analysis successfully exposes how the MATCH Act transforms semiconductor policy from a flexible executive tool into a rigid legislative mandate, potentially ending China's access to advanced chipmaking for decades. The argument's greatest strength is its focus on the servicing loophole as the true choke point, but its vulnerability lies in underestimating the speed with which Chinese engineers and third-party vendors could adapt to maintain their own infrastructure. Readers should watch closely whether the U.S. actually follows through on its threats against Dutch and Japanese firms, or if the bill remains a symbolic gesture that fails to close the gap it promises to seal.