Black Star Institute

Semiconductor, Supply Chain, and National Security — Report No. 00 (2026)

Author: Hunter Storm (https://hunterstorm.com)

Version 1.0 — Published July 2026


Semiconductor, Supply Chain, and National Security | Domain Overview

The Semiconductor, Supply Chain and National Security domain unifies all structural, materials, infrastructure, and national‑security analyses related to the U.S. semiconductor ecosystem. This includes fabrication constraints, water and location dependencies, critical materials, industrial base continuity, and strategic chokepoints across upstream, midstream, and downstream processes.

This hub provides a single authoritative entry point for all related Series, Reports, Photon Ring posts, and Framework connections.

Purpose of This Hub

  • Provide a single authoritative entry point for all supply‑chain related work.
  • Connect Series, Photon Ring Journal posts, Doctrine references, and Framework analyses.
  • Establish continuity across semiconductor, materials, logistics, and national‑security domains.

Subdomains

Critical Infrastructure Dependencies

Cross‑domain dependencies between semiconductor ecosystems and national critical infrastructure.

Industrial Base Continuity

Assessment of domestic capability, chokepoints, and continuity requirements for semiconductor manufacturing.

Location Constraints

Geographic, environmental, and infrastructure factors that determine fab viability and strategic resilience.

Materials and Inputs

Critical materials availability, refining capacity, upstream dependencies, and national‑security exposure.

Water Usage

Structural analysis of water requirements for fabrication, regional constraints, and national‑security implications.


Included Series

Industrial Base and Continuity Series

Structural assessments of domestic capability, continuity requirements, and risk architecture.

National Security Series

Analyses of strategic dependencies, geopolitical exposure, and sovereignty gaps.

Semiconductor Supply Chain Series

Structural analysis of upstream, midstream, and downstream fabrication dependencies.

Semiconductor Materials Series

Reports covering gallium, germanium, rare earths, and other critical materials.

Water and Location Constraints Series

Reports addressing water usage, regional viability, and environmental constraints.


Related Framework Domains

  • Critical Infrastructure
  • Identity‑Layer Security
  • National Security

Related Doctrine

Doctrine references relevant to strategic dependencies, continuity, and industrial base resilience will be listed here.


Institutional Context

This domain supports the Institute’s mission to secure critical systems, reduce strategic dependencies, and reinforce national resilience through structural analysis, materials assessment, and continuity planning.


Domain Overview

Supply Chain Sovereignty is a core domain within the Black Star Institute’s Framework. It addresses the structural, geopolitical, and technological dependencies that shape national resilience, industrial capability, and strategic autonomy. This hub unifies all related Series, Journal posts, and institutional analyses.

Included Series

  • Semiconductor Supply Chain (Series)
  • National Security: Semiconductor Materials (Series)
  • Additional Series forthcoming

Related Photon Ring Journal Posts

  • Photon Ring entries related to semiconductors, supply chain, critical infrastructure, and national security will be listed here.

Companion Reports

These companion reports are part of the Black Star Institute (BSI) Supply Chain Sovereignty and Critical Infrastructure Series. For the full collection, visit the Black Star Institute (BSI) Series hub.

Related Pages

Hunter Storm, President of SDSUG smiling

By Hunter Storm

Supply Chain Sovereign and Critical Infrastructure Series

The Black Star Institute Supply Chain Sovereignty and Critical Infrastructure Series examines the structural dependencies, geopolitical leverage points, and systemic vulnerabilities that define modern national resilience. This series analyzes how globalized production networks, foreign‑owned critical assets, and opaque vendor ecosystems create hidden single points of failure across energy, compute, logistics, and communications infrastructure.

The series is built on BSI’s doctrine that sovereignty is an engineering condition, not a political slogan. It evaluates how nations lose or regain control over essential capabilities through:

  • Boundary‑Systems Analysis — mapping where foreign control intersects with domestic critical functions
  • Institutional Integrity Assessment — identifying governance gaps that allow external actors to shape internal outcomes
  • Hybrid‑Threat Modeling — examining how adversaries exploit supply chain opacity, regulatory drift, and infrastructure interdependence
  • Trajectory Forecasting — projecting long‑term national risk based on current industrial, technological, and geopolitical vectors

This series provides operator‑grade clarity for policymakers, technologists, and institutional leaders navigating an era where supply chains are battlegrounds, infrastructure is contested terrain, and national resilience depends on the ability to see, secure, and sovereignly control the systems that underpin modern life.


The Black Star Institute (BSI) is the first and only boundary systems institute in the world — a sovereign, independent analytical institution that integrates the capabilities of a think tank, research lab, standards body, consultancy, and policy shop without inheriting their structural limitations or vulnerabilities. As a boundary-systems institute, BSI operates across human, machine, and institutional layers to diagnose systemic failure and define governance doctrine.

It is an independent research and governance organization focused on systemic‑risk analysis, automation failures, and human‑layer security. BSI examines how institutions, technologies, and decision systems break under real‑world conditions, producing artifacts that clarify failure modes, strengthen governance, and prevent recurrence. BSI’s sovereign, single‑operator architecture ensures authorship integrity and analytical independence across all research outputs.

BSI’s work integrates over three decades of cross‑sector experience in artificial intelligence (AI), cybersecurity, post-quantum cryptography (PQC), quantum, national security, critical‑infrastructure resilience, and emerging and disruptive technologies (EDT) governance. Its research emphasizes authorship integrity, structural clarity, and practitioner‑driven analysis grounded in operational reality rather than narrative or theory.

Through the Black Star Institute, its founder, Hunter Storm publishes institutional frameworks, case studies, and governance artifacts that support organizations navigating complex technological, regulatory, and hybrid‑threat environments.


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