When historians look back on the AI century, they won’t point to datacenters or GPU clusters as the defining advantage. They’ll ask: which nations created the conditions where the world’s best minds chose to build?
The AI arms race is underway. But it won’t be won with compute. It will be won with credibility.
And right now, America risks forfeiting both.
The False Narrative of AI Power
In Washington, AI geopolitics is often reduced to a predictable checklist: semiconductors, cloud sovereignty, large language models, and regulatory frameworks. These are all necessary—but none are sufficient.
You can buy chips. You can’t manufacture trust.
At its core, AI leadership is about people—researchers, scientists, entrepreneurs. And America’s dominance has never been about geography. It’s been about immigration.
If the U.S. shuts its doors, it won’t matter how many petaflops are running in Utah.
Meet the Immigrant Founders of the AI Century
America leads in AI because the world’s brightest came here to build.
Fei-Fei Li, who pioneered large-scale image classification and now leads Stanford’s Human-Centered AI Institute, came from China.
Jensen Huang, the visionary behind NVIDIA and the global GPU revolution, was born in Taiwan.
Ilya Sutskever, co-creator of the Transformer architecture and co-founder of OpenAI, immigrated from Israel.
Ashish Vaswani, also an immigrant, co-invented the architecture that underpins every modern large language model.
Ali Ghodsi, founder of Databricks, was born in Iran and helped build the data layer of AI.
The pattern is consistent and overwhelming:
Over 60% of PhDs in computer science in the U.S. are foreign-born (NSF, 2023).
Over 70% of AI PhD candidates at MIT, Stanford, and Berkeley are international.
More than 50% of U.S. unicorn startups have immigrant founders (NFAP, 2022).
At NeurIPS 2022, 40% of U.S.-affiliated authors received their undergraduate degrees abroad.
There is no U.S. tech dominance without immigration.
Soft Power Is a Strategic Asset
AI isn’t just about innovation—it’s about global norm-setting. The country that defines AI ethics, regulation, and deployment principles will shape global markets and influence international law.
That’s not done with firewalls. It’s done with values.
Soft power—the power to attract, to persuade, to inspire—is what made America the center of scientific innovation. Openness to ideas, tolerance for dissent, protection for minorities: these aren’t just moral positions. They’re competitive advantages.
But today, that soft power is fraying.
A U.S. administration that demonizes immigrants, attacks elite universities, and chills academic freedom is handing a geopolitical gift to its rivals. If a foreign student wonders whether their tweet could jeopardize their visa, the system has failed.
Already, many Chinese, Turkish, and Arab students are choosing Canada, the U.K., or France. Why gamble on the U.S. when alternatives are safer?
Countries like Canada, France, and the U.K. are not just opening doors—they’re rolling out red carpets. Macron personally invited displaced U.S. researchers to relocate to Paris. The U.K. offers grants to AI researchers impacted by American policy.
Datacenters Don’t Build Themselves
Donald Trump has announced massive datacenter investments under his “Stargate” initiative. But building infrastructure without talent is like laying tracks with no trains.
Under the same administration that champions Stargate, top educational institutions like Harvard and Stanford were attacked. Immigration was vilified. And foreign students were deported for their political views.
You cannot lead the AI era if the people who build it are afraid to study, work, or speak freely.
Tactical visa programs would not work. No entrepreneur or researcher will build on a temporary visa in a country where due process is contingent on ideology.
Democracy Is National Security
It’s also about national security.
DARPA, the National Institutes of Standards and Technology, and U.S. intelligence agencies increasingly rely on immigrant-led university labs. These labs build tools, write code, and develop techniques that impact not just markets—but missile defense, cybersecurity, and bio-surveillance.
Driving out immigrant talent doesn’t just harm innovation. It hollows out security.
You Don’t Beat China By Becoming China
There’s a dangerous temptation in Washington: if China closes its internet, builds state-sponsored models, and restricts dissent, maybe that’s the cost of winning.
But America won the Cold War not by mimicking the Soviet Union—but by standing apart from it.
The same will be true in AI. You don’t beat China by becoming China.
You win by being the place people want to come to—by remaining the gravitational center of global talent.
The Real Race Is for Minds
Immigration isn’t a burden. It’s the strategic lever for AI supremacy.
The countries that attract AI builders will define the tools, shape the ethics, and own the markets of the 21st century.
The U.S. still has every advantage—top universities, leading firms, and global mindshare. But those can evaporate fast.
America’s crown in AI doesn’t rest on silicon. It rests on trust.
And trust can’t be built behind walls.