On Monday, February 23, 2026, the partnership between Vietnam and the United States has reached a historic turning point. Following high-level meetings in Washington D.C. over the past 72 hours, Vietnam has secured an unprecedented agreement with the U.S. administration to access previously restricted technologies in Artificial Intelligence (AI) and semiconductors.
This breakthrough—negotiated during a working visit by a high-level delegation including Hanoi Party Secretary Nguyen Duy Ngoc—positions Vietnam to become the primary “friend-shoring” alternative to China for American tech giants.
The “Tech Hub” Blueprint: Semiconductors and AI
Vietnam is no longer just a manufacturing destination; it is evolving into a strategic node in the global high-tech value chain. The latest cooperation agreements focus on three core pillars:
1. Access to Restricted Technology
In a major diplomatic win, the U.S. has agreed to move Vietnam off restricted technology lists. This allows Vietnamese firms to procure advanced American hardware for AI development and chip design, provided strict monitoring is in place to prevent technology leakage to sanctioned entities.
2. The “50,000 Engineers” Initiative
To support this shift, Vietnam has launched a national strategy to train 50,000 semiconductor engineers by 2030.
University Alliances: High-level talks with Arizona State University (ASU) last week focused on faculty development and curriculum design for specialized chip packaging and testing.
Corporate Integration: Major players like Intel, Meta, and NVIDIA are exploring R&D centers at Hoa Lac High-Tech Park, aiming to integrate Vietnamese talent directly into their global design pipelines.
3. Strategic “Friend-Shoring”
As the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent rulings on tariffs disrupt global trade (impacting rare-earth mineral costs), Vietnam is emerging as a stable partner. By becoming a member of the International Energy Agency (IEA) “family” this week, Vietnam is also securing its energy grid to support power-hungry data centers and AI infrastructure.
Digital Transformation and Legal Milestones
Vietnam’s push for a digital economy is underpinned by the Law on Digital Technology Industry, which officially came into effect on January 1, 2026. This is the world’s first standalone law dedicated to:
Digital Assets: Providing legal certainty for the crypto and blockchain sectors.
AI Regulation: Setting ethical and safety standards for AI deployment in public services.
Infrastructure Goals: Targeting the creation of 150,000 digital technology firms by 2035.
Economic Projections: 2026 and Beyond
The capital city, Hanoi, is leading the charge with a target of 11% growth starting in 2026. The goal is for high-tech industries to comprise over 70% of the city’s industrial output within the next five years.
| Strategic Goal | Target (2030-2050) | Current Progress (Feb 2026) |
| Chip Design Firms | 100+ Companies | Emerging clusters in Hanoi/HCM City. |
| Workforce | 50,000+ Engineers | National STEM certification programs launched. |
| Manufacturing | 10+ ATP Facilities | Expansion of Intel and Amkor plants. |
| Digital Economy | 30% of National GDP | Accelerated by Law on Digital Tech Industry. |






