French spies drop AI giant Palantir over US overreliance fears
World
By
AFP
| Jun 16, 2026
France's domestic intelligence agency will stop working with American AI giant Palantir, Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu said Tuesday, as European nations increasingly doubt the dependability of the United States.
"We cannot accept new strategic dependencies in the digital sphere," Lecornu said in a social media video announcing 655 million euros ($760 million) of new public investment in developing the country's own AI.
The decision by the Direction Générale de la Securite Interieure (DGSI) to end its contract with Palantir follows Washington's move last week to cut off access to AI firm Anthropic's powerful Fable model to non-American users.
France should "not depend on the goodwill of certain partners, who are capable of turning off the access tap" for artificial intelligence, Lecornu said.
The Fable incident prompted calls for greater independence from the United States in AI development from candidates across the political spectrum for next year's French presidential election.
READ MORE
Why US has beaten China to clinch Kenya's Sh9.7tr minerals deal
From financing to procurement: Who is fooling whom in JKIA expansion deal?
Informed consumer is key to dealing with fake motor insurance certificates
Africa's venture capital shift is quiet, but transformative
State to fight fakes with digital product authentication mark
Mwalimu Sacco taps NCBA to rev up salary processing
Why firms are seeking spaces that drive impact, not just transactions
Ruto calls for equal partnerships with wealthy nations, says era of aid is over
Report shows global energy transition slows as Kenya leads Africa gains
Why the right car battery is no longer just about engine size
Palantir's French arm did not immediately respond Tuesday to AFP's request for comment.
The company was co-founded by Peter Thiel, a right-wing Silicon Valley billionaire close to US President Donald Trump, with support from America's CIA.
It has notably worked with the US government to identify undocumented immigrants or targets in the US-Israel war on Iran.
Campaign groups have warned that the company's products pose risks related to mass surveillance, infringements on individual freedoms and data protection.
But Palantir insists it simply provides powerful data processing services that can help surface nuggets of useful information in the flood of available data to government agencies and big companies.
British lawmakers earlier this month called for the country's National Health Service (NHS) to end its own contract with the American company.
"Reliance on a small number of US-based providers represents a clear vulnerability", which could leave public services "at the mercy of foreign actors," the report from parliament's Science, Innovation and Technology Committee said.
The London mayor's office also blocked a bid by the British capital's Metropolitan Police to work with Palantir.