AI security: PaxSilica alliance expands to 24 countries
Washington, June 26
The US-led PaxSilica alliance has expanded to 24 member countries, with 35 nations endorsing a joint statement on artificial intelligence, as the Trump administration steps up efforts to build an international coalition around AI, advanced manufacturing and economic security.
Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs Jacob Helberg said the initiative would continue to grow while focusing on practical projects and cooperation among member countries.
"Today, we're at 24 and 35 countries that have signed the joint statement on AI opportunity," Helberg told IANS.
"And we will continue to expand this coalition in a way that we think makes sense for the group in a way that we think promotes the goals that we're trying to achieve, which is achieving, you know, sensible approaches to broad policy conversations and promoting tangible outcomes."
Helberg said PaxSilica was designed as a flexible partnership in which participating countries could help shape its priorities.
"One of the benefits of PAX is that it is, it remains very flexible, and it really is meant to be a two-way street between ourselves as well as all of our members," he said.
He said the initiative would pursue two parallel tracks - delivering concrete projects while encouraging broader discussions on technology policy and economic security.
"We want tangible projects," Helberg said, citing "PAX Pass," a $50 million foreign assistance package for Panama to roll out an AI logistics platform, the launch of "Foundry School" in partnership with Stanford University to develop an advanced manufacturing curriculum, and an economic security zone in the Philippines aimed at accelerating industrial investment.
Helberg said the administration viewed artificial intelligence as a driver of economic opportunity rather than a technology to be constrained.
"There is a big global debate going on, on what the right policy approaches to artificial intelligence in particular, and technology in general," he said.
"We view it as incredibly important that people appreciate that there's no ceiling to technology, that innovation means increased productivity and means a growing pie."
He said the United States wanted the benefits of AI to reach entrepreneurs and young people across partner countries.
"We are incredibly motivated to work with our friends in order to make sure that the benefits of innovation ripple out to everyday people, to entrepreneurs, so that people, young people in Kazakhstan and Argentina and Costa Rica and other places can actually use the benefits of these new technologies to build new services, new companies, new applications."
Helberg referred to the newly announced collaboration with Stanford University to develop a world-class seminar on advanced manufacturing, with plans to eventually share the curriculum with leading higher education institutions across the PaxSilica network.
The Trump administration has made technology diplomacy and economic security central pillars of its foreign policy, seeking to strengthen cooperation with partner countries on artificial intelligence, critical technologies and resilient supply chains.
— IANS
Reader Comments
Another alliance? Feels like the world is splitting into tech blocs. While it's good to have standards for AI safety, I worry about developing nations being left behind. The $50 million for Panama's logistics sounds good but is that enough for real impact? 🤔
So this is basically America's answer to China's tech influence. India needs to play this smartly—we can't afford to be too dependent on anyone. Our Make in India and Digital India initiatives could align well, but we must ensure our own strategic autonomy in AI development.
The Stanford collaboration for advanced manufacturing curriculum sounds promising. Indian students and institutions could benefit immensely from such knowledge sharing. But let's see if these "tangible projects" actually reach grassroots entrepreneurs or just remain corporate deals.
"No ceiling to technology" sounds good in theory, but AI without proper regulations is dangerous. We've seen how social media algorithms amplified misinformation in India. I hope this alliance also addresses ethical frameworks, not just economic growth. Technology must serve humanity.
As a Canadian expat living in Bangalore, I think this is great. The tech talent here is amazing, and such collaborations could create real opportunities. But I wish the article mentioned more about data security and privacy—those are critical for countries like India with huge digital populations.
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