Intel became the first of the 18 named companies to publicly acknowledge the IRGC threat, saying it is 'monitoring the situation' -- four days after the list was published.
The Times of India broke the Intel response story; CNBC and TIME had previously confirmed the IRGC list but reported no corporate replies.
X users are noting that Intel's statement is the bare minimum a publicly traded company can say when a foreign military names it as a target, and asking why the other 17 remain silent.
Intel has become the first of the 18 American companies named on the IRGC's target list to issue a public statement, saying the company is "monitoring the situation" and "taking steps to ensure the safety of our employees." [1] The response came four days after the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps designated 18 U.S. firms as military targets on March 31. [2]
As this paper reported yesterday, forty-eight hours of collective silence from the named companies -- Apple, Google, Microsoft, Tesla, Boeing, and the rest -- was itself the story. Intel's statement, while minimal, breaks that silence. The company operates fabrication facilities in Israel, including its Fab 28 in Kiryat Gat, one of the most advanced semiconductor manufacturing plants outside of Taiwan. [3] Those facilities are not abstract geopolitical risk factors. They are physical structures within range of Iranian ballistic missiles.
Intel did not disclose whether it had filed an 8-K material event disclosure with the SEC. It did not say whether operations at its Israeli facilities had been modified. It said it was monitoring. The other 17 companies, as of publication, have said nothing at all. [2]
-- DAVID CHEN, Beijing