The posture makes sense once you consider two facts. One: industries which may live and die on capricious regulatory rule making must make their case to those with their hands on the levers of power. In 2026 America, those hands are professed patriotic Republicans. Two: Big Frontier LLM is losing the tech battle, or at least losing the easy assumption that America’s lead is automatic and permanent. They are on their back foot so they must frame the open vs closed model debate wrongfully as a fight between America and China. America cannot afford to lose a battle to China and by extension Anthropic, OpenAI and Alphabet cannot afford to lose to their competition.
Yet there is nothing inherently Chinese about open models and nothing inherently American about closed models. If anything, it is the opposite. Open models are decentralized, inspectable, forkable, and difficult to monopolize. That aligns with an American instinct to diffuse power, prefer competition over permission, and distrust single points of control. Closed models concentrate capability behind a small number of gatekeepers, wrapped in secrecy, and sustained by privileged access to regulators. That logic is far closer to centralized control than to open competition. The real fault line is not America versus China. It is democratic diffusion versus unnatural scarcity, and good tech versus bad tech.
Full article linked.
But also by that argument they would have beaten us to frontier model tech as well. Their education system appeared better than ours 20 years ago. We could have a bigger and broader conversation comparing the two systems and China's has a lot of flaws