The £500m plan to stop Britain being America’s ‘AI vassal state’
The £500m plan to stop Britain being America’s ‘AI vassal state’ Arthur Mensch had a stark warning for the Assemblée nationale. Mensch, the 33-year-old founder of French AI company Mistral, is the country’s most celebrated tech entrepreneur, lionised by politicians as an example of Gallic innovation and a regular guest of Emmanuel Macron at the…
The £500m plan to stop Britain being America’s ‘AI vassal state’
Arthur Mensch had a stark warning for the Assemblée nationale.
Mensch, the 33-year-old founder of French AI company Mistral, is the country’s most celebrated tech entrepreneur, lionised by politicians as an example of Gallic innovation and a regular guest of Emmanuel Macron at the Élysée Palace.
But in an appearance earlier this month, Mensch told politicians that Europe risks becoming a “vassal state” of the Americans when it comes to AI.
He warned that within two years supply could be “monopolised by American players”.
Britain is generally not as prone to bouts of techno-nationalism as its friends across the Channel – Jacques Chirac funded an attempt to make a European version of Google – but in Westminster, Mensch’s “vassal state” concerns are gaining ground.
Liz Kendall, the Technology Secretary, recently warned that Britain risked becoming over-reliant on US tech giants, which dominate the supply of advanced AI systems, cloud computing infrastructure and AI chips.
Liz Kendall is set to outline an ‘AI hardware plan’ next month – Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire
In a speech at the defence-focused think tank Rusi, Kendall outlined a plan for “AI sovereignty”, warning that 70pc of the world’s AI computing power was controlled by just five companies.
Without mentioning the US directly, she promised to work in particular with “other so-called middle-power nations” and that Britain needed to “reduce over-dependencies” on foreign tech.
While Kendall said Britain did not plan to “pull up the drawbridge”, the tone was markedly different 18 months earlier, when her predecessor Peter Kyle said American tech giants should be treated with a “sense of humility”.
The world has changed since then. Donald Trump has rewritten the global order, threatening to leave Nato and imposing tariffs on allies and enemies alike.
While tech giants were once seen as icons of globalism, Trump has demanded a “new spirit of patriotism and national loyalty in Silicon Valley”, intimating that they could be a tool of US power.
The White House has said American technology should be adopted worldwide to “secure our continued technology dominance”.
Britain has not faced the sharp end of America’s stick compared with countries such as China, where AI giant Nvidia is barred from selling its most powerful microchips.
But with Trump in power, there are signs that US dependence is becoming a risk.
Trump has so far blocked the AI lab Anthropic from sharing its powerful new model, Mythos, with non-American companies.
Donald Trump demanded a ‘new spirit of patriotism and national loyalty in Silicon Valley’ – Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images
Mythos, which represents a step change in AI’s ability to find security flaws, has been provided to top US tech and finance companies so they can discover and fix bugs. But Anthropic has been prevented from making the tool more widely available.
The White House has also unilaterally paused a “tech prosperity deal” with Britain designed to foster the sharing of information on AI.
If the transatlantic relationship were to break down further, and the White House took more drastic measures, Britain could be left hopelessly exposed.
The UK has no global AI giant it can turn to. DeepMind, the closest thing, was bought by Google in 2014 for around £400m, and many promising other start-ups go hunting for American cash.
“AI is now strategic infrastructure,” says Josh Burch, the co-founder of defence-tech firm Gallos Technologies and a former national intelligence official. “As nation states weaponise technology dependencies, control of platforms, data and supply chains now determines who holds leverage. It has become a primary arena of geopolitical competition.”
“It’s an astonishing level of over-reliance on American tech,” Sir Nick Clegg, the former deputy prime minister, said recently. “It’s a level of dependence which is not compatible with the kind of agency and basic sovereignty that a country like ours should aspire to.”
Ministers are now trying to correct that. Last month, the Government launched a £500m Sovereign AI fund, described as being designed to “secure long-term strategic advantage for the UK”. Earlier this month, it appointed Suzanne Ashman, a venture capital investor and Sir Tony Blair’s daughter-in-law, to run it.
James Wise, the fund’s chairman, says the fund’s goal is to ensure that more AI companies that might be critical to the technology’s future remain in Britain. “If any one of those [investments] is right, at scale, then it fundamentally upends the global AI stack as it is today,” he says.
The plan is not for Britain to develop an AI autarky, shut off from overseas companies.
The UK’s energy costs are too high for any AI lab to entertain developing models on British infrastructure, for example.
But ensuring more stay in the UK could give Britain greater leverage in an increasingly transactional world, as well as boost relations between the Government and tech industry.
The fund is small compared to the astronomical sums being raised by American venture capital investors. Nor do the investments it expects to make – up to £20m or access to state AI computing resources – give it much economic power.
Its investment in Ineffable Intelligence represented a tiny portion of the $1.1bn (£818m) the company raised, and the fund does not force companies to commit to investing in Britain.
“I respect the energy and the intent, but I do not think the model will work at scale,” says Matt Miller, a former partner at venture giant Sequoia who now runs his own fund, Evantic.
“When government capital is injected into a market that already has plenty of capital, it props up companies that could not raise from anyone else, it locks up talent in businesses that should be pivoting or winding down, and it creates what is effectively state welfare for AI.”
Wise says the Sovereign AI fund is “not about how much capital the Government gives you”. “The Government shouldn’t be subsidising at scale billions and billions of pounds. What’s more important is that the things people feel it’s been hard to work with government on are made easier.”
Ministers are ramping up their plans for tech sovereignty. Next month, Kendall is set to outline an “AI hardware plan” designed to take advantage of British expertise in semiconductors.
If Mensch’s two-year timeline is correct, there is not much time to waste.
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