
As governments increasingly prioritise AI sovereignty, industry leaders such as Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei and Google DeepMind chief Demis Hassabis have reportedly called for a US-led coalition to set the ground rules for artificial intelligence.
At a closed-door lunch meeting with tech leaders and heads of state, including US President Donald Trump, Amodei and Hassabis both proposed international cooperation on AI to protect against risks associated with the emerging technology, according to a report by CNBC. They also wanted the US to take the lead.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman was also present at the meeting that took place on Wednesday, June 18, at the G7 summit in Évian-les-Bains, France. The gathering comprised a dozen tech executives and leaders of G7 countries.
The proposed coalition comes at a pivotal moment, as countries look more determined than ever to reduce dependence on foreign AI models and strengthen domestic AI capabilities. It also follows claims of increasingly powerful AI models such as Anthropic’s Claude Mythos with advanced cyber capabilities, raising concerns that they can cause major disasters in the wrong hands.
Recently, Anthropic disabled access to its newest models, Fable 5 and Mythos 5, after the US government imposed export controls on the models, citing national security concerns. The AI startup is currently locked in negotiations with the Trump administration over the issue.
Across Europe and the UK, many government officials viewed the move as a stark reminder of how heavily they rely on US-based AI model providers. Similarly, in India, it reignited a long-running debate over technological sovereignty. Several Indian founders, investors, and policy experts took to social media, debating whether the country should accelerate efforts to build its own AI infrastructure, invest more aggressively in open-source alternatives, or continue relying on foreign frontier models.
Who should lead the coalition?
Addressing the group on Wednesday, Anthropic’s Dario Amodei reportedly said that areas of international cooperation should include structured access to frontier models, and trade of chips and critical components that excludes China. Countries should cooperate to address the risk of AI in cyber, bio-terrorism, and areas of intelligence, he added.
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In his comments, Sam Altman called for “an international forum for discussion that establishes globally accepted standards for testing, provides expert and impartial analysis of capabilities and risks, and serves as a venue for cooperation among nations,” as per OpenAI. Urging G7 countries to take control of AI governance, Altman said the debate over whether AI is useful was over and that far more powerful systems would emerge, potentially reshaping the global economy and scientific discovery. But he added that it was for democratic governments — not AI companies — to decide how it is governed.
“Do not cede your responsibilities to AI labs like mine. We develop the technology, and the citizens of the free world make the rules,” Altman was quoted as saying by Reuters.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney reportedly agreed that the US could lead an AI coalition. Other non-US leaders in the room also acknowledged that the US “certainly could play the lead role in working to establish” standards around AI, according to Chris Lehane, OpenAI’s global affairs chief, who is said to have attended Wednesday’s closed-door meeting.
Broadening access to Anthropic’s Mythos
During the meeting, G7 leaders also discussed the creation of a ‘trusted partners’ scheme granting access for non-US nations to advanced AI models from US-based firms like Anthropic.
French President Emmanuel Macron said that he believed progress would be made in coming weeks on broadening access to leading AI models from US companies. Macron further said it was in Washington’s interest to make Mythos more broadly available, as nobody would pay for US AI models if there were fears it could be shut off at any moment.
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Earlier this month, Anthropic said it is expanding access to its closely guarded cybersecurity initiative, Project Glasswing, to a select set of organisations in India, including key government entities that are responsible for safeguarding cybersecurity across sectors like banking, telecom, and power
Beyond Mythos, G7 leaders said in a joint statement on Wednesday that they would task finance officials, regulators, and cybersecurity experts with assessing how frontier AI models could impact financial stability, productivity, and labour markets.
View original source — Indian Express ↗

