Switzerland faces restricted access to advanced AI computer chips as US excludes it from list of trusted allies, potentially impacting academic and industrial research.

"It is clearly up to Switzerland to demonstrate its reliability and provide the US with additional guarantees."
"These technologies are already present in many areas and will be omnipresent in the coming months to years."
Washington has drawn a digital line in the sand, and Switzerland has been left on the wrong side of it. In a move that sends shockwaves through our research institutions, the United States has officially excluded Switzerland from its exclusive list of trusted allies granted unlimited access to advanced artificial intelligence chips. Only 18 nations—including neighbors like France and Germany—made the cut, leaving Switzerland in a precarious position.
This is not a minor bureaucratic adjustment; it is a critical blow to Swiss technological sovereignty. The US dominates the global market for these powerful processors, manufacturing them exclusively. By omitting Switzerland from the 'trustworthy' list, the US Department of Commerce has effectively downgraded our status in the global tech hierarchy. While Japan and the EU giants enjoy unfettered access, Switzerland now faces a looming deadline. In just four months, the free flow of this essential hardware stops, replaced by a restrictive quota system that threatens to throttle our high-tech sector.
The stakes could not be higher for Switzerland’s innovation ecosystem. These are not merely computer parts; they are the lifeblood of modern research and industrial development. Experts are sounding the alarm, warning that a chokehold on AI chip supply could derail progress in sectors ranging from pharmaceuticals to finance. Olga Baranova, Secretary General of the CH++ association, emphasizes the urgency, stating that these technologies will soon be "omnipresent" across all sectors.
The dependence is absolute. With US companies holding a monopoly on production, there are no alternative suppliers to turn to. This restriction hits particularly hard given Switzerland's role as a global hub for major US tech giants. Companies like Google operate massive research centers here that rely heavily on this specific hardware to function. By restricting access, the US risks crippling its own corporate subsidiaries operating on Swiss soil. The looming quota system introduces a layer of uncertainty that researchers and CEOs alike dread—a bottleneck that could force cutting-edge projects to grind to a halt or relocate to 'trusted' jurisdictions.
Switzerland finds itself caught in the crossfire of a superpower standoff. While the exclusion feels personal, the target is almost certainly Beijing, not Bern. The United States is engaged in a fierce campaign to deny rival nations—specifically China—access to the hardware necessary to train next-generation AI models. Washington fears that neutral nations could become backdoors for Chinese companies to circumvent export bans by establishing subsidiaries abroad.
However, neutrality now comes with a steep price tag. The US Department of Commerce has remained silent on why exactly Switzerland failed to meet the criteria for the 'trusted' list, but the implication is clear: our safeguards are currently viewed as insufficient. We are being treated as a potential leak in the dam. This skepticism forces Switzerland into an uncomfortable position, squeezed between its traditional neutrality and the binary 'us-versus-them' logic of current American trade policy. We are effectively guilty until proven innocent, forced to prove that Swiss labs are not conduits for Chinese technological advancement.
The clock is ticking. With only four months until the restrictions bite, the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) is scrambling to mitigate the damage. Discussions with US authorities have already begun, but the burden of proof lies squarely on Bern. As Baranova bluntly puts it, "It is clearly up to Switzerland to demonstrate its reliability and provide the US with additional guarantees."
This is a critical test for Swiss diplomacy. The government must convince Washington that it can be a fortress for intellectual property, capable of enforcing strict end-use controls that satisfy American paranoia without compromising Swiss sovereignty. Failure is not an option. If Switzerland cannot negotiate its way back into the fold or secure a generous quota, we risk a brain drain where the brightest minds and the most ambitious companies leave for Germany or France simply to access the tools they need. The next few months will define whether Switzerland remains a premier destination for AI innovation or becomes a technological backwater.