As Southeast Asia’s largest economy continues accelerating its digital transformation, Indonesia finds itself at a critical juncture, balancing both its desire to build a robust artificial intelligence (AI) ecosystem without becoming overreliant on foreign powers.
This tension was brought in front of the world stage on February 10, 2026 at South China Morning Post’s China Conference: Southeast Asia 2026. Here, Vikram Sinha, president director and CEO at Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison, announced that “digital colonization is the biggest threat for any country,” highlighting how China’s focus on open-source technology could offer Indonesia increased digital infrastructure sovereignty.
That ecosystem includes global industry heavyweights like Hangzhou-based DeepSeek AI and Alibaba Cloud, whose open-source models and offerings are often marketed as cost-effective and customizable alternatives compared to their more expensive and proprietary Western counterparts. For Indonesia, these platforms are appealing because they provide access to advanced AI capabilities without reliance on U.S.-dominated technology stacks.
However, open-source technologies do not automatically translate to digital sovereignty. Despite the need for foreign partnerships, Indonesia must determine whether leveraging Chinese platforms enhances its own autonomy or simply consolidates its dependencies, a particularly important nuance given the dual-use nature of artificial intelligence and the increasingly intertwined relationship between technological advancement and national security .
Domestic Indonesian efforts to support AI development
Subsequently, Indonesia has launched an aggressive campaign to internalize and grow its critical AI tech capabilities, with a focus on key infrastructure like semiconductors and human capital.
On February 1, 2026, Indonesia’s Ministry of Industry (Kemenperin) announced its launch of a semiconductor industry roadmap focused on chip design, and talent development. Kemenperin also highlighted its establishment of the Indonesia Chip Design Collaborative Center, bringing together private industry participants and chip experts from 13 universities to reduce import dependence and strengthen Indonesia’s role in the global supply chain.
Just several months prior, in August 2025, Indonesia launched its AI Talent Factory, which partners with universities to support AI practitioners to meet Indonesia’s growing demand for AI-based talent.
When put together, these initiatives reflect a broader industrial policy shift that highlights Indonesia’s desire to move higher in the world’s AI value chain from its current position as a downstream consumer of AI technologies.
The importance of strategic foreign partnerships
Despite its desire to establish AI independence, Indonesia knows that it cannot build an entire technological ecosystem without assistance from other countries. China stands out as a crucial partner for Indonesia, though Indonesia is currently attempting to diversify its AI capabilities through other regional partners as well.
Indonesia is increasingly seeking external involvement from foreign partners like China for developing its emerging technologies, to include energy, smart grids, and data centers, all key components of building critical AI infrastructure. The Digital Silk Road is playing a huge role in this respect, with Chinese technology being deployed within Indonesia to position the country for digital economic growth.
Chinese firms like Huawei Cloud and Alibaba Cloud are increasingly investing in Indonesia’s digital infrastructure, positioning themselves as long-term partners in the country’s AI development. The ability for these Chinese firms to bundle hardware, cloud services, and even technical training alongside their open-source AI systems highlight an integrated model that appeals to emerging economies that desire rapid scalability and implementation ease.
This integration carries significant national security implications for Indonesia. Digital infrastructure encompassing all-things-AI and cloud technologies are inherently dual-use technology. As a result, a reliance on Chinese-built data centers, algorithms, hardware, and software introduce the potential of vulnerabilities from the data sovereignty and cybersecurity perspectives. Additionally, deep integration of exclusively Chinese digital ecosystems risks Indonesia’s status in terms of partnering with the United States and other non-Chinese partners, particularly from the military and intelligence perspectives.
Recognizing this, Indonesia has also been expanding its technological relationships beyond just China. Manda Royal Hospital Puri, a private hospital in Banten just a stone’s throw west of Jakarta, adopted a Roen Surgical’s Zamenix system, an AI-based robotic system from South Korea for kidney stone surgery. Koltiva, a Swiss-Indonesian agritech company, was able to launch an AI-enabled traceability pilot in Indonesia on February 11, 2026, albeit under AI Singapore’s AIAP for Industry initiative, a 9-month program training individuals to become AI engineers.
The diversification of partnerships highlights how Indonesia is attempting to balance interdependence between different partners to achieve the growth it wishes to achieve in the AI space while addressing any potential strategic vulnerabilities.
Future challenges for regulating the unknown
As AI adoption increases, the Indonesian government is hastily seeking to establish its own crucial legal frameworks to manage the societal and national security risks of AI.
On January 21, 2026, Indonesia’s Ministry of Communication and Digital announced that it would soon issue two national-level regulations to provide a comprehensive legal framework for responsible AI development within the archipelago nation. These two regulations would establish a clear national AI roadmap and AI security/ethics guidelines.
The necessity of this governance is easily highlighted through the recent controversies surrounding AI in the region. On February 2, 2026, Indonesia’s Ministry of Communication and Digital Affairs reversed its ban on X’s (formerly Twitter) Grok AI chatbot, which was previously imposed alongside Malaysia just one month prior over concerns that it could create sexually explicit deepfakes involving women and children. This has secondary implications for information operations, with dis- and mis-information campaigns playing an increasingly large role in both domestic and international politics.
This rapid reversal suggests that Indonesia’s regulatory environment is still finding its footing, highlighting the need to keep communication channels and technologies open.
Conclusion
Indonesia’s journey to becoming a digital power is characterized by its current predicament of balancing its AI future alongside foreign partnerships. Its simultaneous investment into physical and digital infrastructure alongside human capital, contrasted with its partnership with giants like China highlight the delicate balance that Indonesia is striking to establish its future.
The real test will be whether Indonesia can leverage Chinese technological scale and financing without replicating new forms of dependency and comprising its national security. In an era increasingly shaped by strategic competition between the U.S. and China, Indonesia’s approach may offer a preview of how middle powers attempt to chart a path between competing digital spheres of influence.
