
The White House has introduced a new Tech Corps within the Peace Corps as President Trump moves to strengthen American influence in global artificial intelligence markets.
The initiative links US technology exports with one of Washington’s most established soft power institutions.
It comes as competition with China over advanced technologies intensifies, particularly in developing economies where AI adoption is accelerating.
The programme is designed to help partner nations deploy American-built AI systems while reinforcing US leadership in digital infrastructure.
Tech Corps model
The Tech Corps will operate under the Peace Corps structure but focus on technical expertise.
It will recruit engineers and graduates in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics to support the rollout of American AI tools abroad.
Volunteers will provide last-mile implementation support at the application layer.
The Peace Corps said these AI systems will address real-world grassroots challenges in agriculture, education, health, and economic development.
A Tech Corps website has launched and is accepting applications on a rolling basis.
Service periods will range from 12 to 27 months, with virtual placements available.
As with traditional Peace Corps assignments, volunteers will receive housing, healthcare, a living stipend, and service awards upon completion.
AI exports push
The Tech Corps will deploy volunteers to countries participating in the American AI Exports Program, introduced in July under a Trump administration executive order aimed at maintaining US leadership in advanced technologies.
The move aligns with wider US efforts to counter the global reach of Chinese technology providers.
Chinese firms have expanded in developing markets by offering open-source or open-weight AI models that are relatively inexpensive, highly customisable, and capable of running on local infrastructure, including Qwen3 and DeepSeek.
While a full list of participating nations has not been disclosed, India is expected to join the AI Exports Program. The Commerce Department welcomed India’s participation last week.
The Tech Corps was first outlined by Michael Kratsios, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, at the inaugural India AI Impact Summit 2026 in New Delhi.
AI sovereignty was a central theme at the summit, referring to a country’s ability to develop, control, and govern AI systems within its legal and economic framework.
India and supply chains
India is also joining the US-led Pax Silica initiative, which focuses on securing global supply chains for silicon-based technologies.
Core members include Japan, South Korea, Singapore, the Netherlands, Israel, the United Kingdom, Australia, Qatar, and the UAE.
At the India AI Impact Summit, several American technology firms announced new investments in India’s AI infrastructure, adding to the billions pledged last year.
These commitments align with the objectives of the Tech Corps and the AI Exports Program.
Alongside the Tech Corps, the White House introduced a National Champions Initiative to integrate leading foreign AI companies into customised American AI export stacks.
It also announced measures to help partner nations overcome financing obstacles when importing the American AI stack, working through institutions such as the World Bank and the US International Development Finance Corporation.
Together, these initiatives form part of a coordinated strategy to expand US AI adoption globally while supporting domestic technology industries in partner countries.
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