9 April 2026
France did not just rescue a struggling tech asset. It moved to keep the machines behind its nuclear simulations, AI ambitions, and high-end computing capacity out of foreign hands—and called that choice what it is: sovereignty. 🇫🇷 Why France spent €404 million to take full control of Bull during Atos’s restructuring 🖥️ What Bull actually builds, and why supercomputers matter for nuclear defense, AI training, and scientific power ⚛️ How ownership of advanced computing infrastructure has become a national security issue, not just a business question 🏭 Why Bull’s plant in Angers matters so much as Europe’s only supercomputer manufacturing facility 🤖 How France is trying to reduce dependence on American cloud, AI, and computing infrastructure by keeping design and production at home 🔐 Why this acquisition signals a broader European shift from outsourcing critical technology to defending it 🌍 What Bull’s nationalization reveals about the emerging economic logic of strategic independence across Europe This is not just an industrial intervention. It is part of a wider geopolitical shift in which governments are treating computing power the way they once treated oil, steel, and defense production: as infrastructure too important to leave exposed.
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