By Steve Holland and Alexandra Alper
WASHINGTON, Feb 23 (Reuters) – Chinese AI startup DeepSeek’s latest AI model, set to be released as soon as next week, was trained on Nvidia’s most advanced AI chip, the Blackwell, a โsenior Trump administration official said on Monday, in what could represent a violation of U.S. export controls.
The official said โthe U.S. believed DeepSeek would remove the technical indicators that might reveal its use of American AI chips. The official declined to say how the U.S. โgovernment obtained the information.
Nvidia declined to comment.
The Chinese embassy in Washington said in a statement that Beijing opposes โdrawing ideological lines, overstretching the concept of national security, expansive use of export controls and politicizing economic, trade, and technological issues.โ
The Commerce Department and DeepSeek did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The official did not provide information on how DeepSeek obtained the Blackwells, but noted that U.S. policy is “we’re not shipping โBlackwells to China,” emphasizing that DeepSeek’s possession โ of the chips could represent an export control violation.
The news, not previously reported, could further divide Washington policymakers as they struggle to determine where to draw the line on Chinese access to the crown โ jewels of American AI semiconductor chips.
China hawks fear chips could easily be diverted from commercial uses to help supercharge China’s military and threaten U.S. dominance in AI.
But White House AI Czar David Sacks and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang argue that shipping advanced AI chips to China discourages โChinese โcompetitors like Huawei from redoubling efforts to catch up with Nvidia’s and โAMD’s technology.
U.S. export controls, overseen by the Commerce โDepartment, currently bar Blackwell shipments to China.
In August, U.S. President Donald Trump opened the door to Nvidia selling a scaled-down version of the Blackwell in China. But he later reversed course, suggesting the firm’s most advanced chips should be reserved for U.S. companies and kept out of China.
Trump’s decision in December to allow Chinese firms to buy Nvidia’s second most advanced chips, known as the H200, drew sharp criticism from China hawks, but shipments of the chips remain stalled over guardrails built into the approvals.
The official declined โto comment on how the latest news would impact the Trump administration’s โdecision on whether to allow DeepSeek to buy H200s.
The U.S. official also said โDeepSeek’s Blackwells are likely part of a cluster at โits data center in Inner Mongolia, an autonomous region of China. The model they helped train likely relied โon the “distillation” of models made by leading-edge U.S. AI โcompanies, including Anthropic, Google, OpenAI, โand xAI, echoing allegations made by OpenAI and Anthropic, the official added.