Behind DeepSeek: France’s Path to AI Excellence

By leveraging its mathematical expertise and open-source innovation, Europe can compete with the United States and China—not just through massive investments, but above all by keeping scientific culture at the heart of its strategic vision.

As China’s DeepSeek reshuffles the global AI competition, France is also seeking to highlight its cutting-edge capabilities, announcing major investment projects in digital infrastructure at the Paris Global Summit. The rapid success of Mistral AI has demonstrated France’s potential, with its researchers and engineers defying the educational crisis through their mathematical talent. Yet a gap persists between this scientific excellence and public action, as seen in recent missteps—most notably the premature launch of the open-source AI model Lucie. The state must redeploy its scientific expertise to ensure strategic cohesion in these investments and prevent Europe’s digital ecosystem from being systematically overshadowed by Silicon Valley.

This moment is all the more critical as the notion that cutting-edge AI is an exclusively American domain fades, given the proven capabilities of countries like China—and France, with its strong mathematical tradition perfectly aligned with the challenges of neural networks. DeepSeek has shown the world that, with just a few million dollars and limited graphics cards, it’s possible to achieve results that rival those of American giants. Barely a year ago, Mistral also unveiled a model that competed with OpenAI’s, developed in a matter of months by a team of just a few dozen people. France’s AI expertise is undeniable. This talent is also evident within U.S. tech giants: Yann LeCun, Meta’s chief AI scientist, has inspired an entire generation. His company’s open-source model, LLaMA, was initially developed by a Paris-based team.

Many of us already recognized in 2023 the rise of a more efficient and refined AI than that of California’s giants. French minds often find opportunities in Big Tech to apply their mathematical brilliance. Several of Mistral’s founders, in fact, honed their skills in these companies. However, if every European success is ultimately absorbed by American giants—as Mistral nearly was—the benefits for Europe will remain minimal. Given the economic upheaval AI brings, such a trend would lock us into dangerous dependency. Transhumanist visionaries have no real plan for Europe beyond its picturesque landscapes.
The development of infrastructure and data centers, backed by massive investments, is essential for our autonomy. While France’s efforts in this direction are commendable—assuming they materialize fully—they must avoid hiding behind convoluted consortia reminiscent of Airbus-era strategies. Yet we cannot overlook the need for a deeper reflection on funding sources, decision-making balance with international partners, and the long-term viability of these projects.

This also requires addressing the persistent technological deficit in public administration, despite the renewed focus on industrial policy. Scattered funding, insufficient analysis, and the excessive event-driven communication of “France 2030,” along with the overhyped “hydrogen revolution” and reindustrialization statistics skewed by self-employment, demand a more fundamental effort from the state. This is especially urgent as global political shifts threaten to disrupt the open-source ecosystem, which is central to Europe’s AI catch-up strategy.

Open source represents a remarkable opportunity for technological knowledge sharing. Yann LeCun is a vocal advocate, and he seems receptive to the idea of his home country reclaiming its rightful place in scientific tradition. However, given U.S. officials’ outcry against DeepSeek and calls for stricter restrictions, there is a risk that Big Tech’s dominance could tighten further, leaving only China as a credible counterbalance. Governments will now have to address the circulation of AI models and open-source frameworks as a key issue in trade negotiations.

Europe will not match the scale of American investments. Yet DeepSeek, Mistral, and others worldwide have proven that we can reposition ourselves in the digital landscape—by relying on open source for now, but above all by placing engineering culture, with all its versatility, back at the core of our strategic decisions. This path, neglected by Europe over the past three decades, is the one being followed by BRICS nations that are effectively positioning themselves in the tech race. We will not succeed by focusing solely on regulatory questions, but by restoring scientific culture to the heart of our choices.

This text was originally published on the website of Les Echos.