India Joins US-Led Pax Silica Declaration, Rejects "Weaponised Dependency"

The United States has welcomed India as a signatory to the Pax Silica Declaration, a flagship U.S. effort focused on artificial intelligence and securing global supply chains. U.S. Under Secretary Jacob Helberg stated the declaration is a stand against "weaponised dependency" and economic blackmail, framing economic security as integral to national security. The partnership aims to build a resilient supply chain foundation, from critical minerals to AI intelligence, to unleash human potential. The move further solidifies the strategic partnership between New Delhi and Washington, following recent collaboration on critical minerals.

Key Points: India Joins US Pax Silica Declaration on AI & Supply Chains

  • India joins US-led AI & supply chain pact
  • Pact counters economic coercion & blackmail
  • Aims to build secure, diversified supply chains
  • AI seen as key to future prosperity
3 min read

"As we sign Pax Silica declaration, we say no to weaponised dependency": US Under Secy for State Jacob Helberg

US Under Secretary Jacob Helberg hails India's move, declaring "economic security is national security" against coercion and blackmail in supply chains.

"So today, as we sign the Pax Silica declaration, we say no to weaponised dependency, and we say no to blackmail. - Jacob Helberg"

New Delhi, February 20

Jacob Helberg, United States Under Secretary of State for Economic Growth, Energy, and the Environment on Friday hailed India joining the Pax Silica Declaration, noting that it underscores the importance of economic security translating into national security and stands in the face of coercion and blackmail undermining the prosperity of nations.

Speaking at the Pax Silica declaration, Helberg highlighted, "We watch as our friends and allies face daily threats of economic coercion and blackmail, forced to choose between their sovereignty and their prosperity. We find ourselves grappling with a global supply chain that is massively over-concentrated".

"So today, as we sign the Pax silica declaration, we say no to weaponised dependency, and we say no to blackmail, and together, we say that economic security is national security, but we must be precise about what that word means."

He added, "We are forging a supply chain that is the foundation for prosperity. We are building a new architecture that diffuses intelligence, placing the awesome power of AI into the palms of our people's hands and unleashing a wave of unprecedented possibilities from the minds to the models. We are securing the full stack of the future, the minerals deep in the earth, the silicon wafers in our labs and the intelligence that will unleash human potential."

Helberg underscored that Pax Silica is the declaration that "the future belongs to those who build and when free people join forces."

"We do not wait for the future to be given to us. We build it ourselves," he said.

He praised US Ambassador to India, Sergio Gor in forging closer ties between New Delhi and Washington, highlighting how it is a testament "to the vital importance that the United States places on this friendship."

His remarks come as India formally joins the Pax Silica--the US-led effort on artificial intelligence and supply chain security on the sidelines of the Global AI Impact Summit being held here in the national capital.

Pax Silica is the US Department of State's flagship effort on AI and supply chain security, advancing a new economic security consensus among allies and trusted partners.

The Pax Silica Declaration underlines the importance of a reliable supply chain indispensable to mutual economic security and recognises AI as a transformative force for long-term prosperity.

The partnership comes shortly after India participated at the Critical Minerals Ministerial convened by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio earlier in February, represented by External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar.

The India AI Impact Summit 2026, the first global AI summit hosted in the Global South, has brought together policymakers, industry leaders, academics and civil society representatives to deliberate on responsible AI governance and inclusive technological advancement.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good move, but the proof will be in the implementation. We've signed many declarations before. Will this actually lead to more semiconductor fabs in India, or just more imports from "friendly" countries? Need to see concrete tech transfer and investment.
R
Rohit P
"Economic security is national security" - absolutely true! Look at what happened with oil prices. If AI and chips are the new oil, we cannot be dependent. Proud that India is at the table shaping the rules, not just following them. 👏
S
Sarah B
As someone working in tech, this is encouraging. The concentration of chip manufacturing is a real risk. Diversifying the supply chain with allies makes everyone more resilient. Hope this leads to more opportunities for Indian engineers and startups.
K
Karthik V
The timing is perfect with the AI summit in Delhi. India has the talent and the market. Partnerships like this can help bridge the infrastructure gap. But we must ensure the benefits reach our MSMEs and not just big corporations.
M
Michael C
While the sentiment is good, let's be clear-eyed. The US is also protecting its interests. We must ensure this partnership is truly mutual and that India's strategic autonomy isn't compromised. Our foreign policy has always been about balancing relationships.
D
Divya L

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50