US Unveils "Pax Silica" AI Alliance to Secure Supply Chains and Counter Dependency

The United States is advancing "Pax Silica," a coalition framework designed to secure the industrial foundations of artificial intelligence and reduce strategic dependencies. Under Secretary Jacob Helberg framed the initiative as a critical response to the vulnerability created by supply chain leverage in the AI age. The coalition will focus on executing integrated infrastructure projects and aligning members around pro-innovation AI policies, resisting burdensome regulations. The alliance recently expanded with India's formal accession, joining other key partners like Japan and the UK to strengthen critical minerals and AI cooperation.

Key Points: US Launches Pax Silica AI Coalition to Secure Supply Chains

  • New AI-era economic security architecture
  • Reducing strategic dependency on rivals
  • Integrating logistics with secure data
  • Promoting pro-innovation AI policy
  • Expanding coalition with India's membership
3 min read

US pushes Pax Silica in AI era pivot​

The US outlines Pax Silica, a new economic security architecture for AI supply chains, as India joins the coalition to reduce strategic vulnerabilities.

"In the AI era, supply chains are leveraged... dependency is vulnerability. - Jacob Helberg"

Washington, Feb 24

The United States is building a new economic security architecture to secure artificial intelligence supply chains, Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs Jacob Helberg told lawmakers Tuesday, casting Pax Silica as Washington's answer to strategic dependency in the AI age.​

"I did not come here today to speak to you about tariffs. I did not come here to discuss the minutiae of trade deficits or the technical specifications of logic chips. I came here to speak to you about survival," Helberg said in testimony before a Congressional committee.​

Framing the moment as historic, he said: "History is not a straight line. It is a series of crossroads. And today, the United States and its closest partners stand before the most consequential crossroads we have faced in a century."​

The defining question, Helberg argued, is not whether artificial intelligence will transform the global economy, but "who will control the industrial foundations that make AI possible, and who will be forced to depend on those who do."​

That imperative underpins Pax Silica, which he described as "a coalition for the AI age, focused on rebuilding supply chain security across the infrastructure, industrial capacity, and critical technologies that now determine national power."​

"In the AI era, supply chains are leveraged," he warned, arguing that "dependency is vulnerability." Pax Silica, he said, is "an economic security architecture built to reduce strategic dependency, build reliable redundancy, and outcompete coercive systems without becoming them."​

Citing growth figures, Helberg said, "G7 growth averages 1.5 per cent; Pax Silica countries average 4.7 per cent. And thanks to President Trump's pro-growth policies, balanced trade, energy dominance, deregulation, and tax incentives, the US is again leading at 4.3 per cent."​

He outlined two pillars for the next phase: execution and alignment.​

On execution, the United States and its partners will issue joint Requests for Proposals to integrate logistics infrastructure - including ports, railways, and highways - with secure data flows and end-to-end visibility. On industrial capacity, he stressed that "Industrial capacity is not nostalgia. In this century, it is sovereignty."​

Helberg also highlighted the American AI Exports Program, calling it "the United States' signature AI diplomacy initiative" and "a whole-of-government effort to share the benefits of American AI technologies with partners around the world."​

On policy alignment, he said Pax Silica would promote a "Pro-Innovation, Pro-Adoption approach to AI policy." "We believe in AI opportunity, not AI trepidation," he said, adding that the United States would "resist the extraterritorial reach of censorship and burdensome regulations."​

The coalition is expanding. India formally joined the initiative last week, signing the Pax Silica Declaration in New Delhi alongside US officials. "India joins Pax Silica, the coalition that will define the 21st century economic and technological order," US Ambassador Sergio Gor said before the signing in New Delhi.​

The alliance includes countries such as Japan, South Korea, the UK, and Israel and aims to strengthen critical minerals supply chains and deepen cooperation on artificial intelligence.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priyanka N
"Dependency is vulnerability" – that line hits hard. For too long, we've seen how supply chain shocks can cripple an economy. If this partnership helps secure our access to critical minerals and chips, it's a win. Hope our negotiators got a good deal for Indian industry.
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Arun Y
Let's be cautiously optimistic. The US is framing this as a coalition, but it's clearly about containing China's rise. We must ensure India's interests are primary, not just playing a supporting role in an American-led alliance. Our foreign policy should be for *our* benefit first.
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Sarah B
Interesting to see the "Pro-Innovation, Pro-Adoption" stance. The EU's regulatory approach can be stifling. If this coalition fosters faster, responsible AI development and shares benefits, it could be a game-changer for global tech progress. Hope the execution matches the vision.
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Karthik V
The focus on integrating logistics (ports, railways) with secure data flows is crucial. Imagine the efficiency gains for our ports like Mundra or JNPT! This is where real, tangible benefits for the common man come from - faster, cheaper goods. 👍
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Meera T
With respect, I have a concern. The article mentions "resisting extraterritorial reach of... burdensome regulations." This could be a double-edged sword. We need strong data privacy and ethical AI guardrails for our citizens, not a race to the bottom. Hope our government keeps that in mind.

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