There is a short list of technologies that governments have decided are too important to lose.
Nuclear. Semiconductors. Satellites. GPS. The internet itself.
AI just made the list.
Anthropic abruptly disabled its newest frontier models — Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5 — after the U.S. government ordered it to suspend foreign-national access on national-security grounds.
As the headlines ran, investors debated whether it was bearish for AI.
But in our view, it’s the single most bullish macro signal for AI infrastructure we’ve seen all year.
Here’s why.
From Consumer Tool to Strategic Asset: The Regime Change Many Are Misreading
For the past several years, Washington has treated frontier AI the same way it treated cloud computing, smartphones, or social media: as transformative technology that deserves attention, maybe some guardrails, but nothing approaching this level of control.
The federal government’s ‘cease and desist’ to Anthropic signals a shift of epic proportions.
By shutting down access on explicit grounds of national security, Washington is saying that AI models are no longer consumer productivity tools. They’re now strategic assets whose access, deployment, and security matter to national power.
That is a regime change. And regime changes of that magnitude almost always have large, durable consequences for capital flows.
The Manhattan Project of Sovereign AI — and Why the Analogy Is Not Hyperbole
In 1942, when the U.S. government decided that atomic weapons were a national-security imperative, it built an industrial pipeline to ensure it succeeded — from uranium mining to enrichment to delivery systems — at a scale and speed that had never been attempted in peacetime.
We are watching the early stages of something structurally analogous.
The difference is that the ‘Manhattan Project’ of sovereign AI requires not one centralized government program but an entire ecosystem: domestic semiconductor fabs, secure data center campuses, high-bandwidth networking, stable power grids, and model development labs operating under strict security protocols.
The U.S. has signaled it is serious about building that ecosystem — through CHIPS Act funding, export controls on advanced semiconductors, and now direct national-security intervention in frontier model access.
Japan became the first international partner in the U.S.’ Genesis Mission, committing $500 million alongside a matching $500 million from the U.S. Department of Energy — a combined $1 billion over five years to advance AI science, next-generation computing, and autonomous laboratory systems through joint teams spanning 12 DOE National Laboratories and 12 leading Japanese research institutions.
Saudi Arabia’s Project Transcendence is deploying $100 billion toward AI infrastructure, model development, and data centers.
The UAE has launched G42 as its sovereign AI vehicle, with Abu Dhabi committing billions to domestic compute capacity.
And China has been quietly building sovereign AI infrastructure for years — ChangXin Memory Technologies scaling domestic HBM production, Huawei developing its own GPU stack, and state-directed capital flowing into data center construction at a pace that rivals the hyperscalers.
Every one of those commitments reinforces the others. Sovereign AI is now a race — and races don’t have off switches.
How National Security Classification Sets a Permanent Floor Under AI Infrastructure Spending
Once a technology is classified as critical to national security, the political cost of underfunding it becomes unacceptably high. That means capital will flow regardless of economic cycles, earnings misses, or Fed policy.
The most sophisticated private capital in the world started repositioning around this thesis before Washington made it official. Where it went will make more sense once you see what’s underneath it.
Because the entire AI infrastructure stack sits directly in the path of that spending.
- Secure compute: Foreign-access restrictions mean domestic, sovereign, security-hardened data centers become a requirement, not a preference. Hyperscaler buildout just got a policy tailwind.
- Chips and memory: If frontier models are strategic assets, the chips that run them are, too. Domestic semiconductor production, Nvidia (NVDA) allocations, high-bandwidth memory supply — all become matters of national priority. That’s structurally bullish for firms like NVDA, Broadcom (AVGO), Micron (MU), and Sandisk (SNDK).
- Networking and optics: AI infrastructure communicates, constantly, at scales that dwarf anything the internet was originally designed to handle. All of it runs across physical fiber, switches, and optical transceivers. Arista Networks (ANET), Ciena (CIEN), and Corning (GLW) are direct beneficiaries.
- Power and cooling: Sovereign AI clusters run continuously, consume extraordinary amounts of power, and generate heat that requires industrial-scale cooling systems. That demand grows with every new model generation — bullish for GE Vernova (GEV), Vertiv (VRT), and Eaton (ETN).
- Cybersecurity: If AI models are now in the same category as military hardware, then the security perimeter around them will be built to military-grade standards. Companies like CrowdStrike (CRWD), Palo Alto Networks (PANW), and Fortinet (FTNT) should thrive as a result.
Together, these trades form a single investment thesis: own the infrastructure layer of a technology that governments have decided they cannot afford to lose.
The Sovereign AI Race Is Self-Reinforcing: What That Means for the Infrastructure Stack
National-security-motivated government intervention in AI is what transforms this trade from a growth theme into a permanent spending priority.
It’s the thing that puts a floor under capex cycles that would otherwise be subject to earnings pressure, credit tightening, or executive hesitation.
Once this dynamic is established, it becomes self-reinforcing: each country’s build accelerates the others’, which requires more chips, power, networking, and security.
That’s a flywheel.
Core AI infrastructure names — like NVDA, AVGO, ANET, and VRT — are precisely the companies that benefit most when AI infrastructure becomes a sovereign imperative rather than an enterprise discretionary.
We are watching closely for:
- New government AI infrastructure contracts and sovereign AI fund announcements
- Allied-nation buildout cadence
- Accelerated domestic fab investment, particularly anything related to secure, export-controlled advanced packaging and HBM production
- Security hardware specs for AI data centers — when DoD and allied governments start publishing requirements for secure AI infrastructure, those spec sheets will be a roadmap for which companies win.
There’s one more thing worth watching: the private capital already spinning this flywheel from the inside…
We’ve analyzed Peter Thiel’s last 13F — zero Nvidia, zero Apple, zero Microsoft, zero Tesla.
Not trimmed. Out entirely.
His private fund went into the physical layer of the AI economy — energy infrastructure, nuclear power, and the hard assets that make sovereign AI possible. Most of those positions aren’t accessible to retail investors. But there are seven publicly traded stocks that mirror those same bets almost exactly. That’s the Billionaire’s Backdoor — and sovereign AI just made it more relevant than ever.
The Anthropic suspension was a declaration that AI matters too much to leave unguarded. And it’s the kind of macro shift that, if you’re positioned correctly, makes careers.








