The EU’s four countries—Germany, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and France—join Pax Silica, as the U.S. builds a 24-country AI supply-chain bloc to de-Sinicize its ties with China

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ME News report. On June 24 (UTC+8), according to Beating Monitoring, the European Union, the Netherlands, Germany, and Greece have officially joined the U.S.-led Pax Silica Alliance. The alliance is intended to safeguard the supply chain of AI-related technologies and reduce Western countries’ reliance on China’s AI supply chain. Pax Silica Alliance’s designer, Jacob Helberg, Deputy Secretary of State for Economic Affairs of the United States, revealed at a summit in Washington that Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica, Kazakhstan, and Panama will also sign agreements this week, bringing the total number of member countries to 24. Pax Silica was established in 2025, and its current focus is to quickly reduce reliance on China’s rare earths and build a secure supply chain network in areas such as chips, critical minerals (especially reducing reliance on China’s rare earths), and energy. Helberg emphasized that traditional multilateral organizations such as the G7 or G20 are not suitable for directly managing the AI economy; Pax Silica focuses on “innovative sovereignty,” which is fundamentally different from the “digital sovereignty” that could lead to redundant and mediocre investments under the United Nations’ Global Digital Compact. (Source: BlockBeats)
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