Apple Europe (or however it's set up) is presumably not an American company, and not subject to American law, being based elsewhere...
think of it this way: a US company is caught doing business with a company wholly owned by a sanctioned individual. say the us company argued "we weren't doing business with Pavel Sanctionovich, we were doing business with Pavel S. Inc., a UK company that just happens to be owned by Pavel.", would the courts accept that?
Even if Apple benefits though, I'm not sure American law binds foreign subsidiaries, otherwise I think they'd be taxing them as well :)
You're probably right, and even if not, theres probably a whole slew of regulations they could impose to make it non-useful. Still seems odd that Washington gets to decide what a company in other country B does, forbidding the export of RAM by that company B to other country C.
Show. Me. The. Plan. Hint: the plan will take ten years and cost trillions in investment and will have massive ramifications for many critical industries.
If your plan doesn’t exist or lacks mention of those things above, let’s talk after you revise and resubmit.