Asia
US forges ‘Pax Silica’ alliance to counter China in AI and semiconductor race
Australia, the United Kingdom, Israel, South Korea, Japan, and Singapore have accepted the “Pax Silica” strategic initiative proposed by the US. This initiative includes a commitment to “create a secure, prosperous, and innovation-focused silicon supply chain, from critical minerals and energy inputs to advanced manufacturing, semiconductors, artificial intelligence infrastructure, and logistics.”
According to an analysis in AsiaTimes, the Netherlands and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) also attended the Pax Silica Summit in Washington on December 12 but did not sign the Pax Silica Declaration.
Taiwan was invited as a special guest. Canada and the EU reportedly participated in discussions regarding supply chain issues. India was notably absent from the summit.
Pax Silica formalizes the semiconductor and artificial intelligence alliance established by the US under the Trump and Biden administrations. From Washington’s perspective, it also defines the “practical limits of self-sufficiency” that the initiative aims to achieve, serving as the first line of defense in the world’s new geostrategic competition.
The official website of the US Department of State states, “Pax Silica is the State Department’s flagship effort on AI and supply chain security, building a new economic security consensus among allies and trusted partners.”
According to Under Secretary for Economic Affairs Jacob Helberg, “If the 20th century ran on oil and steel, the 21st century runs on computers and the minerals that power them. This historic declaration heralds a new economic security consensus that enables like-minded partners to build tomorrow’s AI ecosystem.”
The Pax Silica Fact Sheet states the following:
“Pax Silica aims to reduce coercive dependencies, protect the materials and talent that form the foundation of AI, and ensure that like-minded countries can develop and deploy transformative technologies at scale.
Pax Silica is a positive-sum partnership. Its purpose is not to isolate others, but to coordinate with partners who want to remain competitive and prosperous.”
However, although the Pax Silica Declaration does not explicitly name China, it clearly targets the country.
The declaration points to the importance of addressing “non-market practices that undermine innovation and fair competition.” Emphasizing the significance of private investment, Pax Silica notes that coordination is necessary to “protect these investments from market distortions of overcapacity and unfair dumping practices and to preserve a level playing field for innovation and growth.”
The declaration states, “We understand the importance of cooperation in the implementation of our respective policies to protect sensitive technologies and critical infrastructure from undue access, influence, or control.”
In comments reported by Politico, Under Secretary Helberg explicitly targeted China and its Belt and Road Initiative, stating:
“This is an industrial policy for the economic security coalition, and it’s a game-changer because there is no group today where we can come together on the AI economy and how we’re going to compete with China in the AI space. By aligning our economic security approaches, we can begin to move in concert to basically block China’s Belt and Road Initiative, which is designed to grow its export-oriented model, by blocking China’s ability to buy up ports, major highways, transportation, and logistics corridors.”
Arguing that the Pax Silica group will assume a role for AI similar to the one the G7 played in the industrial age, the under secretary asserted, “This commits us to a process where we’re going to be cooperating on aligning our export controls, screening foreign investments, combating anti-damping, but with a very proactive agenda to secure the chokepoints in the global supply chain system.”
According to the Fact Sheet, the initiative responds to the “growing demand from partners to deepen economic and technological cooperation with the US.” This implies that the US is asking its partners not to engage in a similar relationship with China.
Referencing Pax Romana and Pax Americana, the declaration says, “Pax Silica is a new kind of international grouping and partnership, bringing together the countries that are home to the world’s most advanced technology companies to unlock the economic potential of the new AI age.”
Pax Silica does not say anything new about the Taiwan issue and offers no concrete proposals regarding the supply of rare earth elements, but it does offer some relief to partner countries uneasy about US protectionism:
“We believe that true economic security requires reducing over-dependencies and forging new connections with trusted partners and suppliers committed to fair market practices. At the same time, we will seek to ensure trusted partners have access to all the technological breakthroughs that are shaping the AI economy.”
For Japan and South Korea, key component suppliers, joining Pax Silica is both a way to please a potential Trump administration and a green light for their own national semiconductor projects.
On the day the Pax Silica Summit was held in Washington, the Japanese press reported that about 20 more companies were considering investing in Rapidus, a new chip foundry being built near Sapporo on the northern island of Hokkaido.
Rapidus is a Japanese venture established to catch up with TSMC, a cutting-edge semiconductor contract manufacturing company, aiming to begin mass production at the 2-nanometer node in 2027 and at 1.4 nm shortly thereafter.
Founded in 2022, Rapidus was initially backed by Sony, Toyota and its semiconductor manufacturer Denso, NAND flash memory producer Kioxia, national telecom operator NTT, telecom equipment manufacturer NEC, investment firm Softbank, Japan’s largest bank Mitsubishi UFJ, and the Japanese government. Rapidus is collaborating with IBM to commercialize IBM’s 2 nm process technology.
Since then, 22 new investors have emerged, including Honda, Fujitsu, Canon, Fujifilm, Seiko Epson, Ushio, Kyocera, JX Advanced Metals, Dai Nippon Printing, Hokkaido Electric Power, Nippon Express, Nohmi Bosai (fire prevention), Argo Graphics (digital design and manufacturing process technology), Nagase Sangyo (specialty chemicals and functional materials), seven commercial banks, and the Development Bank of Japan. Additionally, Organo is building and will own the water treatment facilities within the plant.
Rapidus has thus transformed into a comprehensive public-private national industry project.
In South Korea, the government has announced an “AI Age Semiconductor Development Strategy,” which includes plans to build 10 new semiconductor factories and increase the country’s fabless (design-only) semiconductor sector tenfold.
This strategy was publicly announced on December 10 by Minister of Trade, Industry, and Resources Kim Jung-kwan during the “Artificial Intelligence (AI) Age K-Semiconductor Vision and Development Strategy Briefing,” chaired by President Lee Jae Myung.
As reported by Business Korea, the strategy aims to “move beyond [South Korea’s] current semiconductor industry structure centered on memory semiconductors and develop system semiconductors, including fabless and foundry, while also enhancing competitiveness in materials, components, and equipment to leap forward as the world’s second-largest semiconductor powerhouse.”
While Pax Silica can be seen as an American strategy, it also provides a platform for the industrial policies of Japan and South Korea, which do not want to cede technological leadership to China and seek to maximize the benefits of their partnership with the US.
Asia
China launches patrols east of Taiwan after Japan and Philippines open maritime boundary talks
Beijing said it had conducted law enforcement patrols in waters east of Taiwan in response to a decision by Japan and the Philippines to launch talks on maritime boundary delimitation.
According to a statement from the China Coast Guard, a flotilla led by the vessel Daishan carried out law enforcement patrols “in accordance with the law” on Monday.
China Coast Guard spokesperson Jiang Lue said the operation was “a necessary action” in response to Japan and the Philippines “unilaterally announcing the start of negotiations on maritime delimitation in waters east of China’s Taiwan Island.”
“Such an announcement seriously infringes upon China’s territorial sovereignty and its maritime rights and interests,” Jiang said.
“We urge Japan and the Philippines to immediately cease all illegal actions that violate China’s sovereignty and rights,” he added.
Jiang also said the coast guard would continue strengthening its control and management of the relevant waters and that China would take concrete measures to “resolutely safeguard territorial sovereignty and maritime rights and interests.”
The United States and most of its allies, including Japan and the Philippines, do not recognize Taiwan as an independent state and acknowledge it as part of China. The United Nations has also adopted resolutions reflecting this position. However, Washington continues to provide arms to Taiwan as part of its broader efforts to counter China and encourages its allies to do the same.
Following a summit in Tokyo between Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., the two countries said in a joint statement issued on Thursday that they had agreed to begin “formal negotiations” to delimit their exclusive economic zones (EEZs) and continental shelves.
Beijing condemned the planned talks as “completely illegal and invalid” and swiftly lodged formal diplomatic protests with both Tokyo and Manila.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said on Friday: “The so-called delimitation negotiations are entirely illegal, invalid and void. They will have no impact whatsoever on China’s claims or on China’s exercise of its legitimate rights in the area east of Taiwan Island.”
The latest escalation comes at a time when relations between Beijing and both Tokyo and Manila are already strained. Japan and the Philippines are treaty allies of the United States, while China remains engaged in separate territorial disputes with Japan in the East China Sea and with the Philippines in the South China Sea.
As US attention and resources have increasingly shifted toward the war involving Iran, and as the White House has made the Western Hemisphere a strategic priority, Japan and the Philippines have stepped up diplomatic engagement in the region commonly referred to as the Indo-Pacific.
That effort has included building closer security and defence ties with other countries, prompting Beijing to accuse them of encouraging bloc confrontation in the region.
Japan and the Philippines do not share a maritime boundary. However, their seabed claims could overlap because both countries seek to extend their legal continental shelves beyond 200 nautical miles, equivalent to 370 kilometres or 230 miles.
The overlapping area lies east of Taiwan, southwest of Japan’s Ryukyu Islands and north of the Philippines’ Batanes Islands.
Yang Xiao, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China’s highest-ranking state-affiliated think tank, said Taiwan’s EEZ and continental shelf are part of the area under discussion.
“These are China’s rights and are not something that the two sides can negotiate among themselves,” Yang said.
In an interview published on Sunday by Yuyuan Tantian, a social media account affiliated with state broadcaster CCTV, before the China Coast Guard announced the patrols, Yang said Beijing would take “historic and unprecedented” countermeasures against Tokyo and Manila.
“Since they are negotiating in a three-party overlapping zone, we can also take further steps to advance our jurisdiction in the waters east of Taiwan,” Yang said.
“If the other side insists on reckless and destructive actions, we will inevitably introduce new countermeasures.”
Yang described the waters east of Taiwan as a vital maritime area for the island’s economic activities.
“If these waters are divided between Japan and the Philippines, that would clearly harm the interests of the people living on Taiwan Island,” he added.
Asia
SoftBank overtakes Toyota to become Japan’s most valuable company
As artificial intelligence reshapes industrial structures in Japan and South Korea, stock market rankings are being redrawn. SoftBank Group has overtaken Toyota Motor to become Japan’s most valuable listed company.
SoftBank shares have surged as the global artificial intelligence rally gathers momentum, lifting the technology conglomerate’s market capitalisation above that of Toyota for the first time in more than two decades.
The shift reflects a broader reordering of Japan’s equity market. Automakers, alongside banks, steelmakers, energy companies and other traditional heavy industries, are losing ground to chipmakers and companies linked to artificial intelligence.
SoftBank shares jumped 14% on Monday, reaching a new record high. The company’s market value climbed to 48 trillion yen, or $301 billion, making it the most valuable company listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
Toyota had long held the top position, with a market capitalisation of approximately 45 trillion yen. The last time SoftBank surpassed Toyota was in March 2000, at the peak of the dot-com bubble.
SoftBank’s rapid rise has been driven by strong earnings performance and its substantial investment in ChatGPT developer OpenAI.
The Japanese company reported net profit of 1.82 trillion yen, or $11.4 billion, for the first three months of 2026, 3.5 times higher than in the same period a year earlier. The group is also increasing its investment in OpenAI, completing a $10 billion investment in April and committing to invest an additional $20 billion later this year. Total investment is expected to reach roughly $65 billion.
According to The Wall Street Journal, OpenAI plans to file for an initial public offering and aims to list in the United States as early as September. Some media reports suggest the company could seek to raise $60 billion through the offering, potentially valuing it at more than $1 trillion. Such a transaction could become the largest initial public offering in history.
Investors expect the IPO to significantly boost SoftBank’s investment gains. Those expectations have helped drive the technology group’s share price higher. SoftBank shares have risen about 127% since early April.
The company is also planning to invest up to 14 trillion yen in the construction of data centres in France.
Asia
China and Serbia agree to expand cooperation in emerging sectors
Chinese President Xi Jinping met Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic in Beijing, where the two leaders discussed bilateral ties and oversaw the signing of multiple cooperation agreements. Xi also awarded Vucic the Friendship Medal of the People’s Republic of China.
The meeting between Xi Jinping and Aleksandar Vucic began with an official welcoming ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
The two leaders then proceeded to formal talks. Xi said China and Serbia had achieved “positive results” since jointly launching the construction of a “China-Serbia community with a shared future in the new era” in 2024.
Xi said the partnership had not only benefited the two peoples but had also set an example for international relations.
The Chinese president described relations between China and Serbia as an “iron friendship” based on deep historical ties and mutual trust.
Calling on both sides to strengthen exchanges, deepen practical cooperation and continue supporting each other on issues concerning their core interests, Xi also said the two countries should align their development strategies and advance cooperation under the Belt and Road Initiative. In this context, he pointed to transport, energy and infrastructure projects.
Xi also called for expanding cooperation in emerging sectors such as artificial intelligence, the digital economy, green energy and advanced manufacturing.
Aleksandar Vucic congratulated China on the start of implementation of its 15th Five-Year Plan. Vucic also expressed confidence in China’s future development under Xi Jinping’s leadership.
The Serbian president said Belgrade attached great importance to relations with China and firmly supported Beijing on issues concerning China’s core interests.
Vucic thanked Chinese companies for their contributions to Serbia’s economic development and infrastructure construction.
Saying the two countries had made notable progress since establishing their comprehensive strategic partnership, Vucic added that cooperation had expanded across numerous sectors.
The Serbian president also praised China’s role in international affairs, saying Beijing approached smaller countries on the basis of equality and respect and defended international law.
Following the talks, the two leaders witnessed the signing of more than 20 cooperation agreements covering politics, trade, science and technology, education, legal affairs and culture.
The two sides also issued joint statements on steadily advancing the construction of a China-Serbia community with a shared future in the new era and jointly supporting the implementation of four global initiatives.
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