The Foundry Doctrine
How a Four-Day Business Plan in 1987 Became the Hardware of Geopolitical Order
The Conversion
There is a moment in the life of every correctly designed architecture when it stops being what it was built to be and becomes something larger. For TSMC, that moment did not arrive with a announcement or a policy decision. It arrived in a revenue line — when the AI arms race crossed 50% of the world's most indispensable manufacturer and both superpowers simultaneously realized they could not turn it off.
In 2017, Nvidia's data center revenue was approximately $830 million — a significant business, growing quickly, but a fraction of the company's total. By Q1 2026, Nvidia's data center revenue run rate had crossed $100 billion annually. The chips powering that acceleration — the H100, the H200, the B200 — are all manufactured at TSMC. They could not be manufactured anywhere else at the required volume, yield, or process node. The AI arms race, the single most capital-intensive technology buildout in human history, runs on one manufacturer's production schedule.
That is the conversion event this post is built to name. Not a discrete decision, not a signed agreement, not a policy announcement — a revenue trajectory that crossed a threshold and did not come back. When AI and high-performance computing crossed 50% of TSMC's total revenue, the architecture Chang designed in four days in 1985 completed its transformation from commercial instrument to geopolitical one. The neutrality doctrine that had been load-bearing infrastructure for the technology industry became load-bearing infrastructure for the global order itself.
The two conditions are related but distinct. Load-bearing infrastructure for the technology industry means that if TSMC stops operating, the technology industry loses its manufacturing foundation. Load-bearing infrastructure for the global order means something more specific and more dangerous: that both sides of an active strategic rivalry depend on the same manufacturer for the chips that define their military, economic, and intelligence capabilities — and that neither side can destroy or capture that manufacturer without destroying or capturing the thing they are competing for.
The Revenue Signal
The conversion is visible in the numbers before it is visible anywhere else. TSMC does not announce strategic pivots. It reports revenue by technology node and end market — and the revenue tells the story that no press release would.
The numbers above are not merely impressive. They are structurally diagnostic. A company whose revenue grows 35% year over year while simultaneously spending $52–56 billion on capacity expansion is not responding to a market cycle. It is responding to a structural demand signal that its customers — the hyperscalers, the chip designers, the defense procurement officers — have concluded is permanent. You do not commit $52 billion of capital expenditure on a temporary trend. You commit it when you believe the demand is foundational.
TSMC's customers believe the AI buildout is foundational. That belief is now embedded in hundreds of billions of dollars of committed capital on both sides of the transaction. The conversion is not reversible.
The Geopolitical Instrument
The conversion from commercial chokepoint to geopolitical instrument happened in stages, each driven by a policy decision that treated TSMC as a strategic asset rather than a private company.
| Event | Year | What It Signals | FSA Layer |
|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. Entity List: Huawei | 2019 | TSMC's neutrality doctrine is subject to U.S. jurisdiction. Washington can instruct TSMC who not to serve. | Insulation weaponized |
| TSMC halts Huawei shipments | 2020 | TSMC complies with U.S. export controls over its own commercial interest. The neutrality doctrine has a sovereign override. | Conduit interrupted |
| CHIPS and Science Act | 2022 | U.S. government subsidizes TSMC's Arizona expansion. The state is now formally co-invested in the architecture — mirroring Taiwan's 1987 founding structure on American soil. | Source replicated |
| TSMC Arizona groundbreaking | 2022 | First leading-edge TSMC fab outside Taiwan. The redundancy build begins. The architecture begins paying the tax described in Post 1. | Insulation activated |
| Advanced chip export controls | 2022–2023 | U.S. restricts export of advanced chips and chipmaking equipment to China. TSMC's leading-edge capacity is formally enrolled in U.S. strategic competition. | Conversion formalized |
| AI/HPC crosses 50% of revenue | 2024 | The commercial threshold at which TSMC's operational continuity becomes inseparable from the AI arms race. Both superpowers now depend on it for their most strategic technology programs. | Conversion complete |
The table above traces a conversion that took approximately five years from the first sovereign override — the Huawei Entity List decision — to its completion. Each step made the architecture more explicitly geopolitical. Each step also made it more difficult to reverse, because each step deepened the dependency of one or both sides on TSMC's continued operation.
The Huawei decision is the most structurally significant entry in the table, and the most underappreciated. When TSMC halted Huawei shipments in 2020 — cutting off its largest single customer at the time, under U.S. government instruction — the neutrality doctrine was visibly superseded by sovereign authority. The doctrine that Chang had engineered as self-enforcing, that had operated for thirty years without requiring external enforcement, was revealed to have a condition: it holds until a state with jurisdiction over TSMC's supply chain decides it should not.
That condition had always existed. The ASML EUV restriction had demonstrated it earlier — the Dutch government's golden-share mechanism meant that the most critical piece of equipment in the entire semiconductor supply chain was subject to state override independent of any commercial agreement. What the Huawei decision added was the demonstration that TSMC itself — not just its equipment suppliers — was subject to the same override.
The Paradox Deepens
Here is the structural paradox that the conversion produces, and that no amount of policy analysis has yet resolved: the more geopolitically important TSMC becomes, the less either superpower can afford to destroy or capture it — and the more each superpower's attempts to reduce its dependency on TSMC accelerate TSMC's centrality.
The U.S. CHIPS Act is the clearest example. Its stated purpose is to reduce American dependence on Taiwanese semiconductor manufacturing by building domestic capacity. Its primary beneficiary, in terms of direct subsidy, is TSMC Arizona. Washington is spending approximately $6.6 billion in direct funding to build more TSMC capacity — on American soil, but still TSMC capacity, still dependent on TSMC's process technology, still managed by TSMC engineers trained in Hsinchu. The hedge against TSMC dependency is more TSMC.
China's parallel dynamic is structurally identical. Beijing has spent hundreds of billions of renminbi attempting to build a domestic semiconductor industry that does not depend on TSMC or the equipment suppliers that serve it. The result, as of 2026, is a domestic foundry sector — led by SMIC — that operates approximately two process generations behind the frontier, constrained by the absence of EUV lithography, and unable to produce the advanced logic chips that China's AI and defense programs require at competitive yield and cost. China's attempt to route around TSMC has not reduced its dependency. It has made the dependency more painful by making it visible.
This is the deepest expression of the positional monopoly. It is not merely that TSMC is hard to replace. It is that the act of trying to replace it — the investment, the time, the engineering talent diverted from other uses — consumes the resources that might otherwise close the gap. Every dollar China spends on SMIC capacity is a dollar not spent on AI software, on chip design talent, on the applications layer where China has genuine competitive strength. Every dollar Washington spends subsidizing TSMC Arizona is a dollar spent reinforcing the architecture it nominally seeks to diversify away from.
The conversion is complete. The 1987 blueprint is now the hardware layer of the geopolitical contest. And both contestants are building on top of it.
What the Architecture Cannot Tell Us
This is the post where the FSA Wall arrives hardest. The conversion from commercial instrument to geopolitical one is documentable through revenue data, policy decisions, and public statements. What lies beyond the Wall is the question that the architecture raises but cannot answer: whether TSMC's position is stable under the specific stress of a kinetic conflict over Taiwan itself.
The redundancy build — Arizona, Japan, Germany — is the architecture's answer to that question, expressed in capital expenditure rather than words. Post 6 examines what that answer actually costs, and what it reveals about the limits of the design.
- AI/HPC share of TSMC revenue: >58% (Q1 2026); crossed 50% threshold in 2024
- TSMC Q1 2026 revenue: NT$1.134T / ~US$35.71B, +35.1% YoY (April 10, 2026)
- March 2026 single-month record: +45.2% YoY
- Huawei added to U.S. Entity List: May 2019 (U.S. Dept. of Commerce)
- TSMC halts Huawei shipments: September 2020 — compliance with U.S. export controls
- CHIPS and Science Act signed: August 9, 2022 — $52B domestic semiconductor investment framework
- TSMC Arizona CHIPS Act award: up to ~$6.6B direct funding (2024 agreement)
- U.S. advanced chip export controls (Oct. 2022, Oct. 2023, updated 2024): restrict export of advanced logic chips and chipmaking equipment to China
- Hyperscaler AI infrastructure capex (2025–2026): Microsoft ~$80B, Google ~$75B, Amazon ~$105B, Meta ~$60–65B — all dependent on TSMC leading-edge production
- SMIC leading-edge node: approximately 7nm boundary under EUV restrictions; unable to advance to 5nm or below without ASML EUV access
The conversion from commercial instrument to geopolitical one is documentable through the public record. What lies beyond this Wall is not a gap in the documentary evidence but a structural limit on what architecture analysis can determine.
The FSA method traces the design and operation of systems through verifiable source, conduit, conversion, and insulation layers. It cannot determine the stability of the architecture under conditions that have not yet occurred — specifically, a kinetic conflict over Taiwan's political status. TSMC's own contingency planning for that scenario is classified or undisclosed. The U.S. and Taiwanese governments' plans for TSMC's operational continuity under conflict conditions are not in the public record. Whether the redundancy build — Arizona, Japan, Germany — would provide meaningful operational continuity in the scenario the build is implicitly designed to hedge against is unknown.
The architecture speaks loudly through the capital it is spending. What it cannot tell us is whether the spending is sufficient. That question belongs to a different discipline.
Primary Sources · Post 5
- TSMC Preliminary Revenue Reports, Q1 2024–Q1 2026 — AI/HPC revenue share trajectory; node revenue breakdown
- U.S. Department of Commerce, Entity List Addition: Huawei Technologies (May 16, 2019)
- TSMC Statement on Huawei Shipment Suspension (September 14, 2020)
- CHIPS and Science Act of 2022, Pub. L. 117-167 — domestic semiconductor investment framework
- U.S. Department of Commerce, TSMC Arizona CHIPS Award announcement (2024)
- U.S. Bureau of Industry and Security, Export Control Rule: Advanced Computing and Semiconductor Manufacturing (October 7, 2022; October 17, 2023; updated 2024)
- Microsoft, Google (Alphabet), Amazon (AWS), Meta — public capex guidance and investor presentations (2025–2026)
- Nvidia Investor Day presentations (2023–2025) — data center revenue trajectory; TSMC manufacturing dependency disclosure



