The G7 Digital and Technology Ministerial Declaration, signed at Bercy in Paris on Friday 29 May under French chairmanship, contained no mention of cloud sovereignty, CAIDA, or restrictions on US cloud providers 1. The G7 is the bloc of seven leading advanced economies; its digital ministers had gathered to agree shared priorities. The four they signed were AI security, AI openness for smaller firms, digital-sector resilience, and child safety online. The text held to the Hiroshima AI Process, the G7's 2023 AI-safety framework, rather than to France's own "Cloud au Centre" doctrine.
The signed communique confirmed what the ministerial agenda had already foreshadowed . The two frames in play do not combine: the Hiroshima AI Process treats AI as a safety problem to be governed cooperatively, while the sovereignty frame treats US cloud dominance as a strategic dependency to be reduced. A room containing the United States and Japan would accept only the first. France, chairing without an adopted package to table , had no instrument to defend and chose the text its partners could sign.
That choice is the measure of CAIDA's international isolation. The country leading the sovereignty argument inside the EU would not, or could not, carry it into a venue where Washington could object. The law's strongest advocate declined to defend it where defending it had a cost, which leaves Brussels adopting an instrument no G7 communique endorses.
