The global AI landscape is shifting, and India sits at the center of a quiet but decisive negotiation. At the India‑AI Impact Summit, Senior White House AI Policy Advisor Sriram Krishnan articulated a clear expectation: the United States wants allies — including India — to build their AI systems on top of the American AI stack.
This isn’t merely a technical preference. It is a geopolitical architecture.

India and the American AI Stack: A Strategic Alignment
Krishnan emphasized that the American AI stack — from chips to models to applications — should form the foundation on which partner nations build. This includes:
- U.S. semiconductors (Nvidia, AMD, Google TPUs)
- U.S.-developed foundation models
- Applications built on top of these models
He added that India can maintain strategic autonomy, but the rails of global AI should remain American. This is the first layer of the story.
When Senior White House AI Policy Advisor Sriram Krishnan stated that the United States expects allies — including India — to build their AI systems on top of the American AI stack, he wasn’t just outlining a technical preference. He was articulating a geopolitical blueprint.
His message at the India‑AI Impact Summit was clear: the U.S. wants global adoption of its chips, models, and applications, forming a vertically integrated AI ecosystem that friendly nations plug into from the ground up. msn.com
Krishnan emphasized that India can retain strategic autonomy, adding local language capabilities, cultural context, and low‑latency inference layers. But the underlying expectation remains: the rails of global AI should be American.
India’s Sovereign Generative AI Models: A Parallel Assertion
This statement landed on the same day India unveiled a trio of sovereign AI models, all trained entirely within the country — a symbolic counterpoint to the U.S. narrative.
India’s Three Sovereign Models — All Generative AI
Three Indian startups launched foundational models built from scratch in India:
- Sarvam: 30B and 105B parameter LLMs (text‑based Generative AI)
- Bharatgen: 17B multilingual foundational model (Generative AI for text)
- Gnani.ai: A text‑to‑speech model (Generative AI for voice)
These models represent India’s push for autonomy at the model layer, even as global infrastructure remains dominated by U.S. players. msn.com
Google’s Subsea Cable and the American AI Stack
Google’s India–Middle East–Europe subsea cable system quietly reinforces the American AI stack by:
- Reducing latency for AI inference
- Strengthening U.S.-aligned digital corridors
- Anchoring India into the American cloud infrastructure
- Expanding the physical backbone that powers AI workloads
Subsea cables are the arteries of AI. They determine who controls the flow of data — and therefore, who controls the future of AI.
The Quiet Infrastructure Layer: Google’s Subsea Cable with India
To understand the full picture, one must look beneath the surface — literally.
Google’s India–Middle East–Europe subsea cable system strengthens India’s connectivity to U.S.-aligned digital corridors. Subsea cables are the hidden backbone of AI:
- They carry the data used to train and run large models
- They determine latency for cloud and inference workloads
- They shape which country’s infrastructure becomes the “default rail” for AI
While India builds sovereign models, the U.S. deepens influence at the infrastructure layer through cloud platforms, chips, and now, subsea cables.
This creates a layered dynamic:
- India asserts sovereignty at the model layer
- The U.S. reinforces dominance at the physical and cloud layers
A New AI Geography Is Emerging
The interplay between sovereign models and foreign infrastructure reveals a deeper truth:
AI sovereignty is not just about training your own models.
It is about who owns the chips, the clouds, and the cables that make those models possible.
Krishnan’s remarks, India’s sovereign model launches, and Google’s subsea cable together illustrate a world where AI is no longer just a technological race — it is an infrastructural negotiation.
India stands at a pivotal intersection:
- Build local capability
- Leverage global infrastructure
- Maintain strategic autonomy
- And navigate the geopolitical currents shaping the future of AI
The next decade will determine whether nations can truly be sovereign in AI — or whether sovereignty will always be layered atop someone else’s stack.
A Layered AI Sovereignty Map
The interplay between India’s sovereign models and U.S. infrastructure reveals a layered sovereignty:
| Layer | India’s Position | U.S. Position |
| Chips & Cloud Infra | Dependent | Dominant (American AI stack) |
| Subsea Cables | Increasing U.S. alignment | Expanding physical control |
| Models | Building sovereign Generative AI | Wants allies to use U.S. models |
| Applications | Localized, multilingual | Built on American foundations |
This layered view shows that sovereignty is not binary — it is negotiated across infrastructure, compute, and culture.
The Future: Sovereignty on Someone Else’s Rails?
Krishnan’s remarks, India’s sovereign model launches, and Google’s subsea cable together illustrate a deeper truth: AI sovereignty is not just about training your own models. It is about who owns the rails — the chips, the clouds, and the cables under the sea.
India now stands at a pivotal intersection:
- Build local capability
- Leverage global infrastructure
- Maintain strategic autonomy
- Navigate geopolitical currents shaping AI’s future
The next decade will determine whether nations can truly be sovereign in AI — or whether sovereignty will always sit atop the American AI stack.
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