India’s AI ambitions face an infrastructure test after summit criticism
Anthropic chief executive Dario Amodei’s description of the India AI Impact Summit in New Delhi as “extremely disorganised” has triggered a political dispute and renewed scrutiny of India’s AI readiness. He said confusion and last-minute changes contributed to an awkward stage moment involving OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, while rejecting claims of rivalry.
The remarks drew sharp responses from Congress and the BJP, turning criticism of event management into a broader argument over India’s technological standing. Experts cited in the debate said global summits can attract investors, researchers and companies, but they are not a substitute for the infrastructure needed to develop advanced AI systems.
India is seen as having major strengths, including a large software engineering workforce, a growing startup ecosystem and digital public infrastructure. Yet it still trails the United States and China in semiconductor manufacturing, advanced AI models and computing capacity. The country’s ability to become a global AI leader will depend less on high-profile conferences and more on sustained investment in research, chips, computing resources and domestic AI development.