A national‑resilience framework defining U.S. semiconductor sovereignty, supply‑chain security, and institutional architecture.

Black Star Institute

Supply Chain Sovereignty and Critical Infrastructure Series — Report No. 03 (2026)

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

Version 1.0 — Published May 2026

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.

Table of Contents

  1. Preamble
  2. Foreword
  3. Abstract
  4. Purpose
  5. Scope
  6. Methodology
  7. Findings
  8. Executive Summary
  9. Sovereignty Framework
  10. U.S. Semiconductor Ecosystem Overview
  11. Tier System Definition
  12. Tier 1: Sovereign‑Critical Fabrication
  13. Tier 2: Strategic Mid‑Chain Manufacturing
  14. Tier 3: Downstream Integration and Packaging
  15. National Vulnerability Map
  16. Case Study: ON Semiconductor (Tier 2)
  17. Case Study: Intel (Tier 1)
  18. Case Study: TSMC Arizona (Foreign Tier 1 Operating Domestically)
  19. Supply Chain Risk Analysis
  20. Geopolitical Exposure Analysis
  21. Workforce and Talent Pipeline Assessment
  22. Governance and Institutional Stability
  23. Domestic Capacity Gaps
  24. Policy Recommendations
  25. Institutional Architecture for U.S. Semiconductor Sovereignty
  26. Escalation Timeline (Historical + Predictive)
  27. Sovereignty Scorecard
  28. Appendices
  29. Definitions and Terminology
  30. Methodological Notes

1. Preamble

The United States semiconductor ecosystem is the backbone of national power, economic stability, technological leadership, and defense capability. This report establishes a unified, national‑level framework for assessing, strengthening, and governing semiconductor sovereignty across all tiers of the supply chain. It defines the structural risks, institutional dependencies, and systemic vulnerabilities that shape U.S. resilience in an era of geopolitical competition and globalized fabrication.

This report is a national interest artifact. It provides a coherent architecture for understanding how semiconductor capacity, governance, and supply‑chain integrity intersect with national security, economic continuity, and technological independence.

2. Foreword

Semiconductors are no longer a commercial commodity; they are a strategic substrate of national power. The United States relies on a globally distributed, highly fragile, and deeply interdependent supply chain that is increasingly exposed to geopolitical tension, concentrated fabrication, and foreign leverage.

This report was developed to provide policymakers, industry leaders, analysts, and institutional architects with a clear, accessible, and authoritative framework for evaluating semiconductor sovereignty. It integrates national security analysis, supply‑chain mapping, institutional governance, and risk architecture into a single, coherent body of work.

The report uses the Tier System to classify semiconductor entities by strategic importance, dependency structure, and sovereignty relevance. ON Semiconductor appears as a Tier 2 case study, illustrating the vulnerabilities and opportunities inherent in mid‑chain U.S. manufacturing.

This document is designed to be read by both high‑context and low‑context audiences. It is structured for clarity, precision, and accessibility, without sacrificing analytical depth.

3. Abstract

The United States semiconductor ecosystem is structurally indispensable to national security, economic stability, technological leadership, and global competitiveness. Yet the U.S. remains deeply dependent on foreign fabrication, globally distributed supply chains, and concentrated geopolitical chokepoints. This report establishes a unified national framework for assessing semiconductor sovereignty, mapping systemic vulnerabilities, and defining the institutional architecture required to ensure long‑term resilience.

The report introduces a Tier System for classifying semiconductor entities by strategic relevance, dependency structure, and sovereignty impact. It integrates national security analysis, supply‑chain mapping, risk modeling, and institutional governance into a single coherent body of work. Through this framework, the report identifies critical gaps in domestic capacity, evaluates the stability of key industry actors, and outlines policy and structural interventions necessary to secure U.S. semiconductor independence.

This document is intended for policymakers, regulators, industry leaders, analysts, and institutional architects. It provides a clear, accessible, and authoritative foundation for understanding the semiconductor ecosystem as a strategic domain requiring coordinated national action.

4. Purpose

The purpose of this report is to:

  • Establish a national‑level framework for evaluating semiconductor sovereignty.
  • Define the structural risks and dependencies that threaten U.S. resilience.
  • Provide a unified architecture for assessing semiconductor entities across all tiers.
  • Offer policymakers and industry leaders a coherent basis for decision‑making.
  • Identify the institutional, economic, and geopolitical factors shaping U.S. semiconductor security.
  • Present actionable recommendations for strengthening domestic capacity and reducing foreign dependency.
  • Create a durable, repeatable methodology for ongoing assessment and governance.

This report is not a corporate analysis. It is a national‑interest instrument designed to guide long‑term strategic planning and institutional design.

5. Scope

This report covers:

  • The entire U.S. semiconductor ecosystem, including design, fabrication, packaging, and integration.
  • Domestic and foreign entities operating within or supplying the U.S. market.
  • All tiers of the semiconductor supply chain, from sovereign‑critical fabs to downstream integrators.
  • National security implications of semiconductor dependencies.
  • Economic, geopolitical, and institutional factors affecting U.S. resilience.
  • Case studies of representative Tier 1, Tier 2, and Tier 3 entities.
  • Policy, governance, and institutional architecture recommendations.

This report does not attempt to:

  • Provide financial analysis or market forecasting.
  • Evaluate individual companies for investment purposes.
  • Offer proprietary or classified intelligence.

Its scope is national resilience, sovereignty, and systemic risk.

6. Methodology

The report’s methodology integrates multiple analytical frameworks:

1. Sovereignty Architecture Analysis Evaluates the degree to which semiconductor capacity is domestically controlled, strategically independent, and resilient to foreign leverage.

2. Tier System Classification Categorizes semiconductor entities into Tier 1 (sovereign‑critical fabrication), Tier 2 (strategic mid‑chain manufacturing), and Tier 3 (downstream integration and packaging).

3. Supply Chain Mapping Identifies upstream and downstream dependencies, chokepoints, and concentration risks.

4. Institutional Stability Assessment Evaluates governance, leadership continuity, operational maturity, and organizational resilience.

5. Geopolitical Exposure Modeling Assesses risk arising from foreign ownership, fabrication location, political instability, and strategic competition.

6. Workforce and Talent Pipeline Analysis Examines domestic capacity, skill shortages, and long‑term sustainability.

7. Scenario‑Based Risk Modeling Simulates disruptions such as geopolitical conflict, supply chain collapse, or fabrication outages.

8. Comparative Case Studies Uses representative companies (e.g., Intel, TSMC Arizona, ON Semiconductor) to illustrate systemic patterns.

This methodology ensures analytical rigor, repeatability, and clarity across all sections of the report.

7. Findings

The report’s core findings are as follows:

  • The United States lacks sovereign control over critical semiconductor fabrication capacity.
  • Tier 1 fabrication is heavily concentrated in East Asia, creating strategic vulnerability.
  • Domestic Tier 2 manufacturers remain dependent on foreign upstream fabs.
  • The U.S. workforce pipeline is insufficient to sustain long‑term semiconductor expansion.
  • Institutional fragmentation across federal agencies impedes coherent national strategy.
  • Foreign entities operating domestically (e.g., TSMC Arizona) strengthen capacity but do not confer sovereignty.
  • ON Semiconductor exemplifies the structural limitations of Tier 2 U.S. manufacturers.
  • National resilience requires coordinated policy, industrial incentives, and institutional architecture.

These findings form the basis for the report’s recommendations and structural interventions.

8. Executive Summary

The United States semiconductor ecosystem is the foundation of national power, economic stability, and technological leadership. Yet the U.S. remains structurally dependent on foreign fabrication, globally distributed supply chains, and concentrated geopolitical chokepoints. This report provides a unified national framework for assessing semiconductor sovereignty, mapping systemic vulnerabilities, and defining the institutional architecture required to ensure long‑term resilience.

The report introduces a Tier System that classifies semiconductor entities by strategic relevance and dependency structure:

  • Tier 1 — Sovereign‑critical fabrication (e.g., Intel, TSMC Arizona operating domestically, Micron).
  • Tier 2 — Strategic mid‑chain manufacturing (e.g., ON Semiconductor, Texas Instruments, GlobalFoundries).
  • Tier 3 — Downstream integration, packaging, and device‑level manufacturing.

The United States currently lacks sufficient Tier 1 sovereign capacity, relies heavily on foreign fabrication (particularly in East Asia), and faces structural workforce shortages, institutional fragmentation, and supply‑chain vulnerabilities. Tier 2 manufacturers remain dependent on foreign upstream fabs, limiting national resilience.

Key findings include:

  • The U.S. does not possess sovereign control over critical semiconductor fabrication.
  • Foreign Tier 1 entities operating domestically strengthen capacity but do not confer sovereignty.
  • Domestic Tier 2 manufacturers are strategically important but structurally constrained.
  • The workforce pipeline is insufficient to sustain long‑term expansion.
  • Institutional fragmentation across federal agencies impedes coherent national strategy.
  • National resilience requires coordinated policy, industrial incentives, and institutional architecture.

This report provides a comprehensive framework for addressing these challenges through structural reforms, capacity expansion, workforce development, and governance modernization.

9. Sovereignty Framework

The sovereignty framework defines how national semiconductor independence is measured, evaluated, and governed. It establishes the structural criteria that determine whether a nation possesses true control over its semiconductor ecosystem or remains dependent on foreign capacity, foreign governance, or foreign chokepoints.

The framework is built on four pillars:

  • Sovereign Fabrication — Domestic control of advanced‑node and mature‑node wafer production, including ownership, governance, and operational continuity.
  • Strategic Autonomy — The ability to design, produce, and deploy critical semiconductor technologies without foreign leverage.
  • Supply‑Chain Integrity — Secure, diversified, and resilient upstream and downstream supply chains.
  • Institutional Resilience — Stable governance, workforce continuity, and long‑term capacity planning.

These pillars form the basis for evaluating national semiconductor sovereignty across all tiers of the ecosystem.

10. U.S. Semiconductor Ecosystem Overview

The U.S. semiconductor ecosystem is a complex, multi‑tiered structure composed of:

  • Tier 1 sovereign‑critical fabs
  • Tier 2 strategic mid‑chain manufacturers
  • Tier 3 downstream integrators and packagers
  • Design‑only firms
  • Equipment and materials suppliers
  • Defense‑specific semiconductor programs
  • Foreign entities operating domestically

The ecosystem is globally entangled, with fabrication concentrated in East Asia, materials sourced from Europe and Japan, and packaging largely performed in Southeast Asia. The U.S. retains world‑leading design capability but lacks sufficient domestic fabrication capacity to ensure sovereignty.

This overview establishes the context for the Tier System and the national‑level vulnerabilities that follow.

11. Tier System Definition

The Tier System is the structural backbone of this report. It provides a standardized, repeatable method for classifying semiconductor entities by their strategic relevance, sovereignty impact, and dependency structure.

The system consists of three primary tiers:

  • Tier 1: Sovereign‑Critical Fabrication Entities that operate advanced‑node or mature‑node wafer fabrication facilities essential to national security, economic continuity, and technological independence.
  • Tier 2: Strategic Mid‑Chain Manufacturing Entities that produce power devices, analog components, specialty silicon, and other mid‑chain products that support critical industries.
  • Tier 3: Downstream Integration and Packaging Entities that assemble, package, test, or integrate semiconductor components into final products.

This classification is not hierarchical in value; it is hierarchical in sovereignty impact. Tier 1 determines national independence. Tier 2 determines industrial resilience. Tier 3 determines downstream continuity.

12. Tier 1: Sovereign‑Critical Fabrication

Tier 1 entities are the foundation of semiconductor sovereignty. They operate fabrication facilities that produce:

  • advanced‑node logic
  • mature‑node logic
  • DRAM
  • NAND
  • specialty silicon
  • defense‑grade semiconductors

Tier 1 fabs are characterized by:

  • domestic ownership or domestic operational control
  • high capital intensity
  • long lead times
  • strategic indispensability
  • vulnerability to geopolitical disruption

Examples of Tier 1 entities operating within U.S. borders include:

  • Intel (U.S.‑owned, U.S.‑operated)
  • Micron (U.S.‑owned, U.S.‑operated)
  • TSMC Arizona (foreign‑owned, domestically operated)
  • Samsung Austin (foreign‑owned, domestically operated)

Foreign‑owned Tier 1 fabs operating domestically increase capacity but do not confer sovereignty. They reduce risk but do not eliminate dependency.

Tier 1 is the chokepoint tier. If Tier 1 fails, the entire ecosystem collapses.

13. Tier 2: Strategic Mid‑Chain Manufacturing

Tier 2 entities form the backbone of U.S. industrial resilience. They do not operate sovereign‑critical fabs, but they produce essential components that feed into automotive, aerospace, defense, energy, medical, and industrial systems.

Tier 2 manufacturers typically produce:

  • power semiconductors
  • analog and mixed‑signal devices
  • sensors
  • specialty silicon
  • automotive‑grade components
  • industrial control chips

Tier 2 is characterized by:

  • heavy reliance on upstream Tier 1 fabs
  • strong domestic manufacturing presence
  • diversified product portfolios
  • high relevance to critical infrastructure
  • moderate geopolitical exposure

Representative Tier 2 entities include:

  • ON Semiconductor
  • Texas Instruments
  • GlobalFoundries
  • Wolfspeed
  • SkyWater (straddles Tier 1/Tier 2 depending on node and program)

Tier 2 is where industrial continuity is determined. If Tier 2 fails, the U.S. loses the ability to operate its own infrastructure.

14. Tier 3: Downstream Integration and Packaging

Tier 3 entities assemble, package, test, and integrate semiconductor components into final products. This includes:

  • outsourced semiconductor assembly and test (OSAT)
  • device‑level manufacturing
  • module integration
  • PCB‑level assembly
  • final product manufacturing

Tier 3 is characterized by:

  • high labor intensity
  • global distribution
  • heavy reliance on Southeast Asia
  • limited sovereignty impact
  • high operational fragility

Representative Tier 3 entities include:

  • ASE
  • Amkor
  • JCET
  • domestic integrators in aerospace, defense, and medical sectors

Tier 3 determines product availability, not sovereignty. If Tier 3 fails, the U.S. experiences shortages — but Tier 1 and Tier 2 failures are far more catastrophic.

15. Comparative Section: Semiconductor Sovereignty vs. Other U.S. Supply‑Chain Failures

This section explains the structural similarity between semiconductor dependency and other national‑level supply‑chain failures. These comparisons are not political; they are industrial‑sovereignty parallels.

1. Baby Formula Shortage (2022)

A single domestic plant outage caused a nationwide shortage because:

  • production was highly concentrated
  • imports were limited
  • regulatory pathways were slow
  • no redundancy existed

This is identical to semiconductor Tier 1 concentration risk.

2. PPE Shortages (2020)

The U.S. relied heavily on foreign manufacturing for personal protective equipment (PPE) such as masks, gowns, and gloves. When global demand spiked:

  • exports were restricted
  • supply collapsed
  • domestic capacity was insufficient

This mirrors semiconductor packaging (Tier 3) dependency.

3. Ventilator Shortages (2020)

Ventilator production required:

  • specialized components
  • complex supply chains
  • limited domestic manufacturing

When demand surged, the U.S. lacked the upstream components — similar to Tier 2 semiconductor constraints.

4. Automotive Chip Shortage (2021–2023)

Automakers relied on:

  • just‑in‑time inventory
  • foreign fabs
  • long lead times

When Tier 1 fabs prioritized higher‑margin products, automotive production collapsed. This is the most direct parallel to semiconductor sovereignty risk.

5. Critical Minerals Dependency

The U.S. relies on foreign sources for:

  • rare earths
  • gallium
  • germanium
  • cobalt
  • lithium

These materials are essential for semiconductor production. This is an upstream sovereignty failure.

Why These Comparisons Matter

These examples demonstrate:

  • Dependency is not political.
  • Dependency is structural.
  • Dependency is predictable.
  • Dependency is preventable.

Semiconductors are simply the highest‑stakes version of the same pattern.

When a nation outsources critical production:

  • it loses resilience
  • it loses redundancy
  • it loses sovereignty

And when a crisis hits, the system collapses exactly the way it did with baby formula, PPE, ventilators, and automotive chips.

16. National Vulnerability Map

The National Vulnerability Map identifies the structural weak points in the U.S. semiconductor ecosystem. These vulnerabilities are not political; they are engineering, logistics, and industrial‑capacity failures — the same category as the baby formula shortage, PPE shortages, and ventilator shortages.

The vulnerability map is built around five domains:

  • Fabrication Concentration — Over 70% of global advanced‑node capacity is located in East Asia.
  • Materials Dependency — The U.S. imports nearly all gallium, germanium, and rare earths.
  • Packaging Fragility — Over 75% of global packaging occurs in Southeast Asia.
  • Workforce Shortage — The U.S. faces a deficit of 60,000–90,000 skilled workers.
  • Institutional Fragmentation — Multiple agencies share responsibility with no unified command structure.

These vulnerabilities create systemic exposure across all three tiers of the semiconductor ecosystem.

17. Case Study: ON Semiconductor (Tier 2)

ON Semiconductor (ON Semi) is a representative Tier 2 entity — a strategic mid‑chain manufacturer that plays a critical role in automotive, industrial, energy, aerospace, and defense systems.

ON Semiconductor’s Strategic Role

ON Semi produces:

  • power MOSFETs
  • silicon carbide (SiC) devices
  • analog and mixed‑signal components
  • automotive‑grade semiconductors
  • industrial control silicon

These components are essential for:

  • electric vehicles
  • grid infrastructure
  • aerospace systems
  • industrial automation
  • defense electronics

Dependency Structure

ON Semi relies heavily on upstream Tier 1 fabs for:

  • advanced logic
  • specialty silicon
  • wafer supply
  • foundry services

This means ON Semi’s output — and therefore the stability of multiple U.S. industries — depends on foreign fabrication capacity.

Why ON Semi Illustrates Tier 2 Vulnerability

ON Semi demonstrates the structural pattern of Tier 2:

  • strong domestic presence
  • high strategic relevance
  • limited upstream sovereignty
  • exposure to foreign fabs
  • critical role in national infrastructure

ON Semi is not the problem — the systemic dependency is.

Why ON Semi Matters for National Resilience

If ON Semi experiences upstream supply disruption:

  • automotive production halts
  • industrial systems stall
  • energy infrastructure weakens
  • aerospace and defense systems face shortages

This is the same structural pattern seen in:

  • baby formula shortages (single‑point dependency)
  • PPE shortages (foreign concentration)
  • ventilator shortages (complex upstream components)
  • automotive chip shortages (Tier 2 dependency on Tier 1 fabs)

18. Case Study: Intel (Tier 1 — Sovereign‑Critical Fabrication)

Intel is the United States’ primary domestically owned and domestically controlled Tier 1 semiconductor fabrication entity. It is the closest thing the U.S. has to sovereign fabrication capacity across advanced and mature nodes.

Intel’s Strategic Role

Intel operates:

  • advanced‑node logic fabs
  • mature‑node fabs
  • defense‑aligned production lines
  • domestic R&D centers
  • packaging and integration facilities

Intel is the only U.S. company with:

  • end‑to‑end design
  • domestic advanced‑node fabrication
  • domestic manufacturing scale
  • domestic operational control

This makes Intel the anchor of U.S. semiconductor sovereignty.

Intel’s Strengths

  • U.S. ownership and governance
  • Domestic operational control
  • Advanced‑node capability
  • Deep R&D ecosystem
  • Defense‑aligned production

Intel’s Vulnerabilities

  • Node‑transition delays
  • Workforce shortages
  • Capital intensity
  • Global competition
  • Supply‑chain dependencies (materials, tools, chemicals)

Intel is sovereign‑critical, but not sovereign‑sufficient.

19. Case Study: TSMC Arizona (Foreign Tier 1 Operating Domestically)

TSMC Arizona represents a unique category: foreign‑owned Tier 1 fabrication operating on U.S. soil.

This increases U.S. capacity but does not confer sovereignty.

TSMC Arizona’s Strategic Role

TSMC Arizona provides:

  • advanced‑node capacity
  • domestic proximity to U.S. customers
  • reduced shipping and logistics risk
  • partial insulation from East Asian geopolitical exposure

Why TSMC Arizona Is Not Sovereign Capacity

  • Ownership is foreign
  • Governance is foreign
  • Tooling decisions are foreign
  • Production prioritization is foreign
  • Supply‑chain dependencies remain global
  • Workforce is partially imported
  • IP and process control remain offshore

TSMC Arizona strengthens U.S. resilience but does not eliminate dependency.

Why TSMC Arizona Still Matters

  • It diversifies global fabrication
  • It reduces shipping and logistics risk
  • It supports U.S. defense and aerospace sectors
  • It creates domestic workforce opportunities
  • It anchors additional supply‑chain investment

TSMC Arizona is a resilience asset, not a sovereignty asset.

20. Case Study: Samsung Austin (Foreign Tier 1 Operating Domestically)

Samsung Austin is structurally similar to TSMC Arizona:

  • foreign‑owned
  • domestically operated
  • strategically important
  • not sovereign

Samsung Austin provides:

  • mature‑node and specialty logic
  • domestic production for U.S. customers
  • partial insulation from global disruptions

But like TSMC Arizona, it does not provide:

  • sovereign control
  • sovereign governance
  • sovereign prioritization

Samsung Austin is a capacity multiplier, not a sovereignty pillar.

21. Supply Chain Risk Analysis

The U.S. semiconductor supply chain is a globally distributed, multi‑dependency system with structural fragility at every tier. These risks are not political; they are engineering, logistics, and industrial‑capacity vulnerabilities, the same category as the baby formula, PPE, and ventilator shortages. The primary risks originate from the following domains.

1. Geographic Concentration Risk

Over 70% of advanced‑node fabrication is located in East Asia. Over 75% of packaging occurs in Southeast Asia. Critical materials are sourced from a handful of countries.

A single regional disruption — natural disaster, conflict, embargo, or political instability — can cascade across the entire U.S. economy.

2. Single‑Point‑of‑Failure Risk

Many semiconductor components have:

  • one approved supplier
  • one qualified fab
  • one packaging facility
  • one materials source

This mirrors the baby formula shortage: one plant outage → national crisis.

3. Lead‑Time Risk

Semiconductor production cycles are long:

  • 12–16 weeks for wafer fabrication
  • 4–8 weeks for packaging
  • 2–4 weeks for testing and integration

Disruptions cannot be rapidly corrected.

4. Tooling and Equipment Dependency

Lithography, etch, deposition, and metrology tools come from a tiny number of suppliers. If any of these suppliers experience disruption, all fabs are affected.

5. Materials Dependency

The U.S. imports nearly all:

  • gallium
  • germanium
  • rare earths
  • high‑purity chemicals
  • photoresists

These are upstream sovereignty failures.

6. Workforce Risk

The U.S. faces a shortage of 60,000–90,000 skilled semiconductor workers. No amount of capital can compensate for missing talent.

7. Institutional Fragmentation Risk

Multiple federal agencies share responsibility for semiconductor policy. No unified command structure exists. This creates:

  • duplicated efforts
  • conflicting incentives
  • slow response times
  • unclear accountability

This is the same structural flaw that slowed PPE and ventilator mobilization.

22. Geopolitical Exposure Analysis

Semiconductors sit at the intersection of:

  • national security
  • global trade
  • industrial policy
  • technological competition
  • supply‑chain sovereignty

The U.S. faces exposure in several domains.

1. East Asian Fabrication Concentration

Taiwan and South Korea host the majority of global advanced‑node capacity. Any regional instability threatens U.S. access to critical chips.

2. Foreign Ownership of Domestic Fabs

TSMC Arizona and Samsung Austin increase capacity but do not confer sovereignty. Ownership, governance, and prioritization remain offshore.

3. Export Controls and Retaliation Risk

Global semiconductor policy is increasingly shaped by:

  • export controls
  • counter‑controls
  • sanctions
  • industrial incentives

These can disrupt supply chains unpredictably.

4. Strategic Competition

Semiconductors are a central axis of global technological competition. This increases:

  • supply‑chain weaponization
  • industrial espionage
  • IP theft
  • geopolitical leverage

5. Critical Materials Geopolitics

Gallium, germanium, and rare earths are heavily concentrated in a few countries. Export restrictions can instantly disrupt U.S. production.

6. Global Logistics Fragility

Semiconductor supply chains rely on:

  • maritime shipping
  • air freight
  • cross‑border logistics
  • just‑in‑time inventory

Any disruption — pandemic, conflict, port closure — cascades across the system.

23. Workforce and Talent Pipeline Assessment

Semiconductor sovereignty is not only a matter of fabrication capacity or supply‑chain resilience. It is fundamentally constrained by the availability of a skilled workforce. The United States faces a structural talent deficit that threatens long‑term semiconductor independence.

1. Skilled Labor Shortage

The U.S. semiconductor industry faces a shortage of 60,000–90,000 skilled workers across:

  • process engineering
  • equipment maintenance
  • materials science
  • lithography
  • metrology
  • packaging and test
  • automation and robotics
  • cleanroom operations

This shortage affects all tiers:

  • Tier 1 fabs cannot expand without engineers and technicians
  • Tier 2 manufacturers cannot scale production
  • Tier 3 integrators cannot meet downstream demand

2. Education Pipeline Constraints

The U.S. education pipeline is insufficient to meet demand:

  • limited semiconductor‑specific programs
  • declining enrollment in electrical engineering
  • insufficient vocational and technical training
  • long lead times to produce qualified engineers

The result is a structural mismatch between national needs and workforce capacity.

3. Immigration and Talent Mobility

A significant portion of semiconductor expertise globally is mobile, but U.S. immigration pathways for high‑skill technical workers are:

  • slow
  • unpredictable
  • capacity‑limited

This creates friction in talent acquisition and retention.

4. Regional Workforce Imbalance

Semiconductor facilities are geographically concentrated in:

  • Arizona
  • Texas
  • Oregon
  • New Mexico
  • New York

But the workforce is not evenly distributed. This creates regional bottlenecks that slow expansion.

5. Workforce as a Sovereignty Constraint

Even with unlimited capital, the U.S. cannot achieve semiconductor sovereignty without:

  • a larger talent pipeline
  • faster training pathways
  • stable education channels for U.S. citizens
  • long‑term workforce planning

Workforce is the rate‑limiting factor of U.S. semiconductor independence.

24. Governance and Institutional Stability

Semiconductor sovereignty requires not only physical capacity but also institutional coherence. The United States currently suffers from fragmented governance across multiple agencies and programs.

1. Fragmented Federal Oversight

Responsibility for semiconductor policy is distributed across:

  • Department of Commerce
  • Department of Defense
  • Department of Energy
  • National Science Foundation
  • NIST
  • CHIPS Program Office
  • State‑level economic development agencies

This fragmentation creates:

  • duplicated efforts
  • conflicting priorities
  • slow decision cycles
  • unclear accountability

2. Lack of Unified Command Structure

Unlike other strategic sectors (e.g., nuclear energy, defense manufacturing), semiconductors lack a single national authority responsible for:

  • capacity planning
  • supply‑chain oversight
  • workforce strategy
  • crisis response
  • long‑term sovereignty architecture

This is a structural governance gap.

3. Inconsistent Incentive Structures

Federal and state incentives often:

  • compete with each other
  • lack long‑term continuity
  • create regional imbalances
  • fail to align with national priorities

This reduces the effectiveness of industrial policy.

4. Institutional Fragility During Crisis

During the pandemic, fragmented governance contributed to:

  • PPE shortages
  • ventilator shortages
  • baby formula shortages
  • automotive chip shortages

The semiconductor ecosystem is vulnerable to the same failure mode.

5. Need for a National Semiconductor Authority

A unified governance structure would:

  • centralize strategic planning
  • coordinate federal and state programs
  • manage crisis response
  • oversee supply‑chain resilience
  • align incentives with national priorities

Institutional stability is a prerequisite for semiconductor sovereignty.

25. Domestic Capacity Gaps

The United States faces structural capacity gaps across all tiers of the semiconductor ecosystem. These gaps are not political; they are industrial‑sovereignty deficits that mirror the same failure modes seen in PPE shortages, ventilator shortages, and baby formula shortages.

1. Advanced‑Node Fabrication Gap

The U.S. lacks sufficient domestic capacity for:

  • sub‑10nm logic
  • high‑performance compute nodes
  • leading‑edge mobile SoCs
  • advanced AI accelerators

This is the most critical sovereignty gap.

2. Mature‑Node Fabrication Gap

Despite being less glamorous, mature nodes (28nm–180nm) are essential for:

  • automotive
  • industrial
  • aerospace
  • defense
  • medical devices

The U.S. does not have enough mature‑node capacity to support national infrastructure during a global disruption.

3. Packaging and Test Gap

Over 75% of global packaging occurs in Southeast Asia. The U.S. has:

  • limited OSAT capacity
  • limited advanced packaging capability
  • limited domestic test infrastructure

This is a downstream fragility that mirrors PPE dependency.

4. Materials and Chemicals Gap

The U.S. imports nearly all:

  • gallium
  • germanium
  • rare earths
  • high‑purity chemicals
  • photoresists

These upstream dependencies are sovereignty liabilities.

5. Workforce Gap

The U.S. cannot scale semiconductor production without:

  • more engineers
  • more technicians
  • more cleanroom operators
  • more materials scientists

Workforce is the rate‑limiting factor.

6. Institutional Capacity Gap

The U.S. lacks:

  • a unified semiconductor authority
  • long‑term strategic planning
  • coordinated crisis response
  • integrated supply‑chain oversight

This is the same structural flaw that contributed to the baby formula and PPE crises.

26. Policy Recommendations

The report provides a set of structural, institutional, and industrial recommendations designed to close sovereignty gaps and strengthen national resilience.

These recommendations are non‑political and non‑partisan. They are industrial‑sovereignty measures.

1. Establish a National Semiconductor Authority

A unified authority responsible for:

  • national capacity planning
  • supply‑chain oversight
  • workforce strategy
  • crisis response
  • long‑term sovereignty architecture

This eliminates institutional fragmentation.

2. Expand Domestic Tier 1 Fabrication

The U.S. must:

  • increase advanced‑node capacity
  • expand mature‑node fabs
  • support domestic ownership
  • ensure operational continuity

This is the foundation of sovereignty.

3. Strengthen Tier 2 Manufacturing

Tier 2 is essential for:

  • automotive
  • industrial
  • aerospace
  • defense

The U.S. must:

  • expand power semiconductor production
  • increase analog and mixed‑signal capacity
  • support specialty silicon manufacturing

4. Build Domestic Packaging and Test Capacity

The U.S. must:

  • expand OSAT facilities
  • develop advanced packaging
  • localize test and integration

This reduces downstream fragility.

5. Secure Critical Materials

The U.S. must:

  • diversify supply
  • develop domestic refining
  • build strategic reserves
  • invest in recycling and recovery

This reduces upstream dependency.

6. Expand Workforce Development

The U.S. must:

  • employ existing U.S. citizens who have necessary skills
  • create semiconductor‑specific training programs
  • expand vocational and technical education
  • build regional workforce hubs
  • streamline high‑skill immigration as a last resort

Workforce is the bottleneck.

7. Build Strategic Redundancy

The U.S. must avoid single‑point‑of‑failure systems by:

  • diversifying suppliers
  • increasing domestic redundancy
  • building buffer capacity
  • maintaining strategic inventories

This prevents crises like the baby formula shortage.

8. Strengthen Public‑Private Coordination

The U.S. must:

  • align incentives
  • coordinate investments
  • share risk
  • synchronize timelines

Semiconductor sovereignty requires unified action.

27. Institutional Architecture for U.S. Semiconductor Sovereignty

Semiconductor sovereignty cannot be achieved through isolated investments or fragmented programs. It requires a coherent national architecture — a structural framework that integrates governance, industry, workforce, supply chains, and crisis response into a unified system.

This section defines the institutional architecture necessary to secure long‑term U.S. semiconductor independence.

1. National Semiconductor Authority (NSA)

A centralized authority responsible for:

  • national capacity planning
  • supply‑chain oversight
  • workforce development
  • crisis response
  • strategic reserves
  • long‑term sovereignty strategy

This authority would function similarly to:

  • the FAA (aviation safety)
  • the NRC (nuclear regulation)
  • the DOE (energy security)

Semiconductors require the same level of institutional seriousness.

2. National Semiconductor Operations Center (NSOC)

A real‑time operations center responsible for:

  • monitoring global supply‑chain conditions
  • tracking fabrication output
  • identifying disruptions
  • coordinating emergency response
  • managing strategic inventories

This is the semiconductor equivalent of FEMA’s National Response Coordination Center.

3. Regional Semiconductor Hubs

The U.S. must build regional hubs in:

  • Arizona
  • Texas
  • Oregon
  • New York
  • New Mexico

Each hub should include:

  • fabrication
  • packaging
  • materials supply
  • workforce training
  • R&D centers

These hubs create redundancy and reduce geographic concentration risk.

4. National Workforce Pipeline System

A coordinated system that integrates:

  • universities
  • community colleges
  • vocational programs
  • apprenticeships
  • industry partnerships

This system must produce:

  • process engineers
  • equipment technicians
  • materials scientists
  • automation specialists
  • cleanroom operators

Workforce is the bottleneck; this system removes it.

5. Strategic Materials and Equipment Reserves

The U.S. must maintain reserves of:

  • critical materials
  • high‑purity chemicals
  • photoresists
  • spare parts for lithography and etch tools

This prevents upstream shortages from cascading into national crises.

6. Unified Industrial Incentive Framework

Federal and state incentives must be:

  • aligned
  • predictable
  • long‑term
  • strategically targeted

This prevents the current patchwork of competing programs.

7. Crisis Mobilization Protocols

The U.S. must have predefined protocols for:

  • fab outages
  • supply‑chain disruptions
  • geopolitical shocks
  • materials shortages
  • workforce emergencies

These protocols prevent the chaos seen during the PPE and baby formula crises.

28. Escalation Timeline (Historical + Predictive)

This timeline outlines the historical progression of semiconductor dependency and projects future escalation if sovereignty gaps remain unaddressed.

Phase 1: Offshoring Era (1990–2005)

  • U.S. companies outsourced fabrication to reduce costs.
  • Asian fabs expanded rapidly.
  • Domestic manufacturing capacity declined.
  • Packaging and test moved almost entirely offshore.

Phase 2: Concentration Era (2005–2015)

  • Taiwan and South Korea became global fabrication centers.
  • U.S. design firms thrived but lost manufacturing depth.
  • Mature‑node capacity shrank domestically.
  • Materials dependency increased.

Phase 3: Fragility Exposed (2016–2022)

  • Automotive chip shortages halted production lines.
  • PPE and ventilator shortages revealed supply‑chain fragility.
  • Baby formula shortages demonstrated single‑point‑of‑failure risk.
  • Semiconductor dependency became a national‑security issue.

Phase 4: Partial Re‑Shoring (2022–2026)

  • CHIPS Act incentives initiated domestic investment.
  • TSMC Arizona and Samsung Austin expanded U.S. presence.
  • Intel began major domestic capacity expansion.
  • Workforce shortages emerged as the primary constraint.

Phase 5: Sovereignty Fork (2026–2035)

Two trajectories emerge:

Trajectory A: Sovereignty Achieved

If the U.S. implements the institutional architecture defined in this report:

  • domestic Tier 1 capacity expands
  • Tier 2 becomes resilient
  • packaging and materials localize
  • workforce shortages shrink
  • supply‑chain redundancy increases
  • geopolitical exposure decreases

Trajectory B: Dependency Deepens

If the U.S. fails to act:

  • foreign fabrication concentration increases
  • materials dependency worsens
  • workforce shortages intensify
  • domestic fabs face operational bottlenecks
  • Tier 2 manufacturers experience chronic shortages
  • national infrastructure becomes vulnerable

This report is designed to ensure the U.S. follows Trajectory A.

29. Sovereignty Scorecard

The Sovereignty Scorecard provides a structured, repeatable method for evaluating the United States’ semiconductor independence across key domains. It is not a political instrument; it is a national‑resilience diagnostic tool.

Each domain is scored on a 0–5 scale:

  • 0–1: Critical vulnerability
  • 2: Significant weakness
  • 3: Partial resilience
  • 4: Strong resilience
  • 5: Full sovereignty

1. Tier 1 Fabrication Capacity — Score: 2

The U.S. has:

  • limited domestic advanced‑node capacity
  • insufficient mature‑node redundancy
  • heavy reliance on foreign fabs

Intel and Micron provide sovereign capacity, but not enough.

2. Tier 2 Manufacturing — Score: 3

The U.S. has strong Tier 2 manufacturers (ON Semi, TI, GlobalFoundries), but they depend on foreign Tier 1 fabs for upstream supply.

3. Packaging and Test — Score: 1

Over 75% of global packaging is offshore. Domestic capacity is minimal. This is a critical vulnerability.

4. Materials and Chemicals — Score: 1

The U.S. imports nearly all critical materials. This is an upstream sovereignty failure.

5. Workforce — Score: 2

A shortage of 60,000–90,000 skilled workers constrains expansion. Workforce is the rate‑limiting factor.

6. Institutional Governance — Score: 2

Fragmented oversight across multiple agencies creates:

  • slow response
  • duplicated efforts
  • unclear accountability

A unified authority is required.

7. Supply‑Chain Redundancy — Score: 2

The U.S. lacks:

  • geographic redundancy
  • supplier diversity
  • strategic reserves

This mirrors the structural failures seen in PPE and baby formula shortages.

8. Geopolitical Exposure — Score: 1

Advanced‑node capacity is concentrated in East Asia. This is the single largest geopolitical risk in the global economy.

Overall Sovereignty Score: 2.0 / 5

The U.S. has partial resilience, but not sovereignty. Without structural reform, the U.S. remains exposed to global disruption.

30. Appendices

Appendix A: Tier Definitions (Formal)

  • Tier 1: Sovereign‑critical fabrication
  • Tier 2: Strategic mid‑chain manufacturing
  • Tier 3: Downstream integration and packaging

Appendix B: Critical Materials List

  • Gallium
  • Germanium
  • Rare earth elements
  • High‑purity chemicals
  • Photoresists
  • Silicon carbide
  • Sapphire substrates

Appendix C: Workforce Roles Required

  • Process engineers
  • Equipment technicians
  • Materials scientists
  • Automation specialists
  • Cleanroom operators
  • Packaging engineers

Appendix D: Crisis Scenarios Modeled

  • East Asia fabrication disruption
  • Materials export restrictions
  • Packaging facility shutdowns
  • Workforce shortages
  • Tooling supply interruptions

31. Definitions and Terminology

Sovereignty: The ability to produce critical technologies without foreign leverage.

Resilience: The ability to withstand and recover from disruption.

Redundancy: Multiple independent pathways for production and supply.

Tier 1: Fabrication that determines national independence.

Tier 2: Manufacturing that determines industrial continuity.

Tier 3: Packaging and integration that determine product availability.

32. Methodological Notes

This report uses:

  • supply‑chain mapping
  • institutional analysis
  • geopolitical modeling
  • workforce forecasting
  • scenario‑based risk modeling
  • comparative case studies
  • sovereignty architecture frameworks

All findings are derived from structural analysis, not political interpretation.

Hunter Storm, President of SDSUG smiling

By Hunter Storm

Related 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.

Disclaimer

This publication is provided for educational, analytical, and informational purposes. The Black Star Institute does not provide legal, regulatory, or compliance advice. All findings reflect independent, practitioner‑grade analysis based on publicly available information and BSI’s doctrinal frameworks at the time of publication. Institutions, policymakers, and organizations should consult appropriate legal or regulatory professionals before acting on any recommendations.


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, 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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