AI Giants
WASHINGTON: Top executives from leading American artificial intelligence companies, including OpenAI, Microsoft, and AMD, appeared before the US Senate Commerce Committee on Thursday to present a strategic policy agenda aimed at maintaining the United States’ edge over China in the AI race.
The hearing, led by Republican Senator Ted Cruz, comes amid increasing concern in Washington following China’s launch of DeepSeek—a highly capable and affordable AI model that disrupted global perceptions of Chinese technological capacity.
The Senate committee is currently exploring ways to streamline regulations and empower the domestic AI sector to remain globally competitive. Industry leaders are leveraging this moment to lobby the Trump administration for policies that not only boost innovation but also ensure that AI development aligns with democratic values.
The executives argue that the international dominance of US-developed AI is not just a technological concern, but a geopolitical and ideological imperative.
Among the key witnesses at the hearing were Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI—the company behind ChatGPT; Brad Smith, President of Microsoft—OpenAI’s largest financial backer; and Lisa Su, CEO of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), a key player in AI chip manufacturing.
Altman emphasized the urgency of government investment in AI infrastructure. “We’re on the brink of enormous societal transformation driven by artificial intelligence,” Altman stated, adding, “Infrastructure investment is absolutely critical to ensuring that the United States remains the central hub for not only the AI revolution but for all the technological revolutions to come.”
He cited the need for vast computational power, access to large datasets, sustainable energy sources, and a highly trained technical workforce as core requirements for continued US leadership.
Brad Smith echoed these sentiments, highlighting the importance of building a resilient and collaborative AI ecosystem. “Success in AI demands comprehensive support—across hardware, software, data, and talent.
The United States must not only support its companies internally but also deepen partnerships with like-minded allies globally,” Smith said.
The testimony marks a unified call from Silicon Valley’s top AI leaders for proactive, innovation-friendly policy decisions in Washington. Their recommendations are not merely about winning a technological race, but about shaping the future of AI in a way that reflects open, democratic values—countering the rising influence of state-driven AI models emerging from China.

