In a bold endorsement, a senior White House official has crowned India as a technological powerhouse central to America’s AI ambitions. Michael Kratsios, President Trump’s assistant for science and technology, made the remarks during a Fox News appearance, underscoring India’s pivotal role post his attendance at the India AI Impact Summit.
‘India is a technological superpower,’ Kratsios asserted, praising its vast engineering output, strong homegrown talent, and rapid development of AI products and apps. This ecosystem is not just growing—it’s exploding, making India indispensable in the global AI race.
A stark divide is emerging in AI uptake: developed nations sprint ahead while developing ones lag. Kratsios warned that without focusing AI on essentials like health, education, energy, farming, and citizen services, emerging markets could miss a transformative era entirely.
Enter the White House’s American AI Exports Program—a game-changer providing top-tier tech, funding, and hands-on aid to nations in need. This eases the dilemma developing countries faced between innovation and affordability.
Defining ‘real AI autonomy,’ Kratsios explained it as harnessing superior technology for national benefit and independent decision-making in a changing world. He emphasized it’s about sharing US leadership in AI, not targeting competitors.
Future AI will rely on interoperable ‘agents,’ necessitating shared standards. NIST is pioneering this to guarantee safe, efficient multi-agent operations.
The financial barrier is immense: data centers, chips, and energy infrastructure cost billions. To counter this, the US is leveraging development finance bodies and banks. A highlight is the new US Tech Corps—tech volunteers deploying AI worldwide, akin to Peace Corps but digital.
India stands out as a long-time ally in tech dissemination, with US giants establishing deep roots via data centers and research facilities, fortifying Indo-US AI ties for years to come.