The US Commerce Department signed export clearances on 14 May permitting 10 Chinese firms to purchase Nvidia chips, timing the announcement to the opening of the Trump-Xi Beijing summit. The White House presidential-actions index records zero Iran executive instruments across the entire 76-day war ; Trump arrived in Beijing having signed nothing on Iran since departing Washington . The chip clearance was the only signed deliverable on summit Day 1 and it was a commercial document, not an Iran instrument.
The pattern across 76 days is consistent: every Trump commercial action is signed; every Iran diplomatic move is verbal. Donald Trump offered China access to advanced American semiconductors on the day he most needed Chinese diplomatic weight on Iran, with no written quid pro quo on the nuclear file. A US commercial concession to Beijing was signed; a Chinese written commitment on Iran was not requested in any document 1.
The structural significance is not the chip clearance itself but what its sole occupancy of the signed-deliverable column reveals. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Vice President JD Vance made public remarks on Iran at the same summit; those appear in the verbal register. Commerce signed paper. State signed nothing. The summit's opening day produced a technology trade concession dressed in the institutional register of a bilateral breakthrough.
