COREPER, the committee of EU member-state ambassadors, authorised the European Commission on Wednesday 3 June to join the US-led Pax Silica semiconductor alliance, committing the bloc to purchase at least $40bn (€37bn) in American AI chips under the EU-US trade framework 12. France opposed the move and asked the Commission to clarify the Council's steering role; Germany, Italy and the Netherlands backed it 3. Council validation followed on Monday 8 June.
Pax Silica launched in Washington in December 2025 as a State Department effort to coordinate AI-chip supply and export controls among allied nations against China. The UK, Japan, South Korea, India and Australia had all joined before the bloc moved, so the EU enters a club already shaped without it. Euronews described France's stance as treating the alliance as an attempt to colonise Europe; no named French official used that phrase 4.
The commitment lands the same afternoon Brussels adopted its Cloud and AI Development Act , a sovereignty law for the cloud layer. One act asserts control where European alternatives exist; this one accepts dependency where they do not. Europe makes no leading-edge AI accelerator, and its one advancing volume fab at Dresden will turn out mature chips, not the silicon the gigafactories need. Chips Act II, adopted in the same package with new fab-equity authority , is the capital tool meant to close that gap, though it produces no wafer before the $40bn buy lands. France's objection now becomes the test case for how Council oversight of the alliance is governed.
