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Who is Sriram Krishnan? Chennai-born Trump advisor faces backlash for his remarks at AI Summit

White House AI advisor Sriram Krishnan is facing backlash after urging countries at India AI Summit to adopt the “American AI stack.”

Updated on: Feb 20, 2026 03:09 PM IST
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As India hosts the India AI Impact Summit in New Delhi with a strong focus on sovereign AI, remarks by White House official Sriram Krishnan have sparked controversy. The Chennai-born advisor drew criticism online after urging countries, including India, to build on what he described as the “American AI stack” during his address at the summit.

Sriram Krishnan currently serves as the Senior White House Policy Advisor on AI. (X/@sriramk)
Sriram Krishnan currently serves as the Senior White House Policy Advisor on AI. (X/@sriramk)

Krishnan, who currently serves as the Senior White House Policy Advisor on AI, said the US wants the rest of the world to adopt US-built AI infrastructure, models and applications.We want to make sure that the world uses the American AI stack… we want to make sure that the world uses our AI models, and third it uses our applications and builds applications on top. We want to make sure we are amazing and easy to do business with,” he said.

“For India, we have this conversation about what sovereign AI actually means. When we think about it, America is going to have a minimum of $600 billion in investments across areas and it is going to power AI training runs, data centres, and compute. We think all of our allies, and India is a key ally, should be leveraging and building on top of this infrastructure. This does not mean giving up on strategic autonomy. Indian companies will need to bring in local language support and culture,” he added.

Sriram Krishnan faces backlash

Zoho founder Sridhar Vembu criticised the remarks, saying, “This is why brain drain is costly and we must fight hard to retain the next generation of talent in India,” while sharing a clip from Krishnan’s session.

Capitalmind founder and CEO Deepak Shenoy said India must build its own foundational AI models. “India should and will build foundational models, and in general, we need things that cannot be denied to us if America doesn’t like us,” he wrote.

Several users also slammed Krishnan for referring to India as an “ally,” pointing to his Indian education and background. “This guy studied in an engineering college in Chennai and now calls India an ally,” one user commented. Others noted that he became a naturalised US citizen only in 2016.

(Also Read: YouTuber recalls ‘fun chat’ with Google CEO Sundar Pichai at AI Summit: ‘Sir, you give me money every month’)

Who is Sriram Krishnan?

Born in Chennai, Krishnan studied at SRM Valliammai Engineering College in Kattankulathur, Tamil Nadu. He began his career at Microsoft, where he worked on Windows Azure APIs and services, and later joined Facebook in 2013, playing a key role in scaling its mobile app ads business.

He has also worked at Snap and Twitter (now X), where he collaborated with Elon Musk during the platform’s restructuring. In 2021, Krishnan became a general partner at venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) and later led its first international office in London.

An author of Programming Windows Azure for O’Reilly, Krishnan is also an advisor to Indian fintech firm Cred and co-hosts The Aarthi and Sriram Show podcast with his wife, Aarthi Ramamurthy.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bhavya Sukheja

Bhavya Sukheja is a Senior Content Producer at Hindustan Times with over 6 years of experience in digital journalism. She specialises in covering stories that reflect everyday human experiences, with a focus on viral videos, social media trends, and human-interest features that inform readers while sparking meaningful conversations. She loves chasing page views and finding stories that tug at readers’ heartstrings. Known for her strong news sense, Bhavya has a keen ability to spot emerging trends and craft angles that transform viral moments into impactful narratives. Her coverage spans pop culture, entertainment, global affairs, and the internet’s most talked-about topics, helping readers better understand the context behind what is trending online. Before joining Hindustan Times, Bhavya worked with Republic World and NDTV, where she developed her skills in real-time reporting and digital storytelling. Working in fast-paced newsrooms helped her build an editorial approach that prioritises accuracy, clarity, and audience engagement. Bhavya is driven by a curiosity about how people communicate and connect in the digital age. She is particularly interested in stories that highlight cultural shifts, shared emotions, and the evolving nature of online conversations. When she is not tracking trends or producing stories, Bhavya enjoys unplugging and spending time with her cat.

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