The Misframed European Debate
Europe’s current debate surrounding Artificial Intelligence is systematically misframed. The entire conversation has been captured by the binaries of regulation versus adoption, and compliance versus innovation. While guardrails are necessary, they are secondary to the existential question: Who owns the underlying infrastructure? The real issue is sovereignty. Regulating an industry you do not control is ultimately an exercise in futility.
The Risk of Digital Feudalism
If European enterprises and governments rely entirely on base models and cloud computing infrastructure engineered in the United States or China, they are not achieving AI adoption; they are entering into a state of digital feudalism. They become tenant farmers on foreign intellectual land, trading their proprietary data for outsourced cognition. This reliance creates severe vulnerabilities in national security, economic independence, and the ability to dictate the ethical frameworks embedded within the models.
The Imperative for Domestic Infrastructure
True sovereign intelligence requires domestic capacity. Europe must focus its capital on building proprietary foundational models, securing localized sovereign cloud environments, and controlling the data pipelines that feed its critical industries. Sovereignty is not achieved by writing the best regulations for foreign technology; it is achieved by owning the intelligence stack from the silicon to the application layer.
The Path Forward
This requires a massive shift in strategic priorities. Capital must be diverted from creating complex regulatory bodies toward funding robust domestic compute infrastructure and foundational AI research. The goal should not be to slow down foreign AI, but to accelerate the development of a sovereign alternative that aligns with regional values and strategic interests.