Elon Musk told Trump he was freaking out over the US's chip vulnerability in Taiwan: new book – Yahoo News UK

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Elon Musk sounded the alarm about Taiwan's vulnerability to a Chinese invasion, per a new book.
He told Trump and tech CEOs that the US was "headed for disaster" in the event of a Chinese invasion.
Musk was in a meeting where the CEOs discussed the possibility of bringing chipmaking to US shores.
Elon Musk expressed grave concern about Taiwan's dominance in the chip market — and the possibility of a Chinese invasion — in a tech CEO meeting at the White House last year, according to a book published on Tuesday about President Donald Trump's second term.
The book, "Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump," by The New York Times' Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan, reported that the SpaceX owner had met with Trump and the CEOs of firms such as Dell, Qualcomm, and Intel on March 10, 2025.
Haberman and Swan wrote that Musk told the gathering in the Roosevelt Room that he was "shitting bricks about our vulnerability to China."
According to the book, Trump said China's leader, Xi Jinping, had given assurances that Beijing would not launch an invasion of Taiwan while the former sat in the White House.
But Haberman and Swan reported that Trump added a caveat: "Could be lying. Taiwan is the apple of Xi's eye, just like Ukraine was for Putin."
The group of CEOs, alongside Trump and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, then discussed how the US might claw back some of the world's semiconductor supply chain and shift factories from Asia to American soil.
"The United States will only have thirty percent of TSMC's capacity in 2029. If China invades Taiwan, the entire economy crashes," Musk said, per the book.
In May, Musk and other American tech CEOs, including Nvidia's Jensen Huang and Apple's Tim Cook, accompanied Trump on an official visit to China.
Musk was widely regarded as a figure who could help stabilize Beijing and Washington's economic ties.
Tesla operates a major factory, Gigafactory 3, in Shanghai that employs roughly 20,000 workers. The American automaker enjoys the rare arrangement of wholly owning the factory without needing a joint venture with a Chinese firm.
The White House and Musk did not immediately respond to requests for comment sent outside regular business hours by Business Insider.
"Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump" is available for purchase on Amazon.
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