The ink is barely dry on the so-called 'Atlantic Pact' signed between Washington and London, a document trumpeted as a landmark for joint defence and semiconductor dominance. But a cold analysis reveals more smoke than steel. The timing is suspicious: with global supply chains for microchips still fractured and Russia’s hybrid warfare escalating in the information domain, this pact reads like a reactive play, not a proactive strategy.
Let’s strip away the diplomatic language. The core of this agreement is about securing critical semiconductor supply chains, a sector where the West has already lost strategic ground to Taiwan and South Korea. The pledge to 'jointly defend' these supply lines is a threat vector in itself: it signals to hostile actors that we view chip fabs as military targets. Do we have the naval assets to protect transatlantic shipping lanes if a crisis erupts in the South China Sea? I see a readiness gap.
On the defence side, the pact promises deeper intelligence sharing and joint exercises. But intelligence sharing is only as strong as the weakest node. Britain’s recent cuts to electronic warfare capabilities are a known liability. Cyber defences remain siloed. If this is a chess move, it’s a bishop rather than a queen: important, but limited in range.
The real danger is overconfidence. Pacts like these create a false sense of security. Hostile actors, from Moscow to Beijing, will test the pact’s resolve. Expect probing attacks on undersea cables and cyber intrusions into semiconductor design software within six months. We are not ready.
Hardware matters. The Joint Strike Fighter programme showed that transatlantic collaboration often means cost overruns and incompatible systems. Until I see concrete commitments to standardise ammunition, share satellite reconnaissance data in real-time, and co-fund a secure microchip fabrication plant on both sides of the Atlantic, this remains a political statement.
The Atlantic Pact is a necessary step, but it is not a silver bullet. The threat vector is real, and the strategic pivot from procurement to resilience is overdue. Now the work begins.








