AI Under Trump's Control: Can France Still Avoid Digital Dependence?

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The New Association of Webmasters: AI Under American Control: Can France Still Avoid Digital Dependency?

Sunday, June 21, 2026

AI Under American Control: Can France Still Avoid Digital Dependency?

๐Ÿ“Œ The Wake-Up Call<br>Imagine waking up tomorrow and no longer being able to access ChatGPT, Claude, or any other advanced AI tool. Not because of a technical failure, but because a foreign government decided to cut the cord.<br>This isn't science fiction. It nearly happened last week.<br>The Trump administration ordered Anthropic โ€“ the American company behind Claude โ€“ to immediately suspend access to its most powerful AI models for any non-American user. Anthropic, unable to reliably verify the nationality of its users, chose to disable these models for all its clients worldwide, including Americans.<br>The official justification? National security. The unofficial reality? A geopolitical power play that could redefine who controls the digital future.

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๐Ÿ” Section 1 โ€“ What Actually Happened?<br>A Sudden Blockage With Global Consequences<br>On Friday, the U.S. administration formally demanded that Anthropic block access to its two flagship models โ€“ Fable 5 and Mythos 5 โ€“ for all foreign nationals, both inside and outside U.S. territory.<br>Anthropic's response:<br>The company stated it had no technical way to verify users' nationality. As a result, it took the radical step of deactivating these models entirely โ€“ for everyone, including U.S. customers.<br>The official reasoning:<br>The Trump team argued that these models were powerful enough to pose cyberattack risks.<br>The company's counter-argument:<br>Anthropic publicly disagreed, stating that the risks were minimal and did not justify such an extreme measure.<br>But what's really unfolding here is far bigger than a disagreement over security thresholds.<br>โš–๏ธ Section 2 โ€“ A Power Struggle, Not a Security Debate<br>The Real Issue: Who Controls the Most Advanced AIs?<br>This is not merely a technical or regulatory dispute. It is a confrontation between the U.S. state and private AI developers โ€“ and by extension, between the United States and the rest of the world.<br>Anthropic has previously clashed with the Trump administration over the military use of AI, particularly lethal autonomous weapons.

The company opposes such applications. The administration wants to enable them.

But the implications go beyond corporate disagreements. The U.S. is signaling that it can and will use its dominance over AI as a geopolitical lever โ€“ and no one, not even allies, is immune.<br>๐Ÿ‡ซ๐Ÿ‡ท Section 3 โ€“ France's Dependency: A Reality Check<br>A Rare Political Consensus โ€“ But Is It Enough?<br>In France, a rare consensus has emerged across the political spectrum: the country must reduce its reliance on the United States and China for artificial intelligence.<br>Yet the numbers speak for themselves:<br>The vast majority of AIs used in France are American: ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity.

French and European alternatives exist โ€“ Mistral being the most prominent โ€“ but their adoption remains marginal compared to U.S. giants.

This means that a critical portion of France's digital infrastructure now rests on the goodwill of the U.S. government โ€“ and, more specifically, on the whims of Donald Trump.<br>๐Ÿง  Section 4 โ€“ Why This Dependency Matters More Than Ever<br>AI Is Not Just Another Technology<br>Unlike previous dependencies (on GAFAM, cloud providers, or even military hardware), AI touches everything:<br>Scientific research

Healthcare and drug discovery

Financial systems

Education

Defense and intelligence

If the U.S. decided to cut off access to these tools โ€“ in the event of a trade war, diplomatic crisis, or military escalation โ€“ the consequences would be immediate and devastating.<br>This is not alarmism. It's a structural vulnerability.<br>Trump has already threatened the European Union with retaliation multiple times, particularly if Brussels moves to sanction American tech giants. Today, the target is GAFAM. Tomorrow, it could be AI.<br>๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡บ Section 5 โ€“ Europe's Response: Regulation Without Production?<br>The Ambition โ€“ and the Contradiction<br>The European Union has made "digital sovereignty" a stated priority. It now has:<br>The world's most advanced AI regulatory framework

Ambitious public investment plans

A growing ecosystem of startups, with Mistral leading the charge

But here's the problem:<br>Europe is primarily a regulator of AI, not a producer. It consumes massively from American and Chinese companies while trying to control them through legislation.<br>That's not sovereignty. That's supervision.<br>The Nvidia Paradox<br>Even Mistral โ€“ Europe's best hope โ€“ relies on American components, particularly Nvidia chips, which are essential for training and running large AI models.<br>True independence would require rebuilding the entire stack, from hardware to software. That's a generational project, not a quick fix.<br>๐Ÿ“ข Section 6 โ€“ Recent French Announcements: A Step Forward or Too Little, Too...

american france trump digital anthropic models

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