If you're going to win a technology race, you need friends with the good stuff. That's essentially the logic behind the Pax Silica Summit, which the United States held for the first time this Thursday. The goal? Build a multinational coalition that controls everything needed to make AI happen, from the minerals you dig out of the ground to the chips that power the whole operation.
Building The Alliance
Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs Jacob Helberg led the inaugural summit, pulling together eight core nations: Japan, South Korea, Singapore, the Netherlands, Israel, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, and Australia. Taiwan, the European Union, Canada, and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) showed up as guest participants, which is diplomatic speak for "we want you involved but we're still figuring out the exact arrangement."
"Economic security is national security — and together, we're strengthening supply chains from minerals to semiconductors to computers and networks," Helberg wrote on X. It's the kind of statement that sounds obvious until you remember how fragmented and vulnerable these supply chains actually are.
What They're Actually Securing
According to the Department of State's official statement, the initiative tackles vulnerabilities across four critical areas: semiconductor fabrication, critical mineral processing, energy infrastructure, and AI compute capacity. Translation: everything that matters.
The participating nations aren't just bringing diplomatic goodwill to the table. They're hosting some serious industrial firepower. Think Samsung Electronics Co. (SSNLF), SK Hynix, ASML, Sony Group Corp. (SONY), Hitachi Ltd. (HTHIY), Fujitsu, Temasek, Alphabet Inc.'s Google DeepMind, MGX, and Rio Tinto (RIO). That's chip manufacturers, equipment makers, AI labs, and mining companies all represented in one coalition.
David Sacks captured the strategy neatly: "One of the key ways to win a technology race is to create the largest ecosystem. Pax Silica helps us do that."
Helberg has directed U.S. diplomats to identify infrastructure projects and coordinate economic security practices, which means this isn't just a talking shop. They're actually building things and aligning policies.
The China Factor
Let's be clear about what's happening here: America wants to maintain its AI dominance over China, and it's doing so by locking down the supply chain with friendly nations.
Earlier this week, Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) evaluated expanding production of its H200 chips after President Donald Trump allowed exports to China with a 25% fee. It's a delicate balance between maintaining technological leadership and not completely shutting out the world's second-largest economy.
President Trump stated back in September that the U.S. is "easily beating" China in the AI race, crediting tariffs and energy policies for the advantage. Whether you buy that assessment or not, the Pax Silica initiative suggests the administration isn't taking any chances. Building a coalition that controls the full stack of AI production, from mineral extraction to chip fabrication to compute infrastructure, is about as comprehensive as supply chain security gets.




