Sovereignty is becoming a stack, not a slogan.
The European debate about technology sovereignty is shifting from speeches to infrastructure: chips, cloud, models, data, energy and procurement.

Europe often speaks about sovereignty as a political objective, but the practical question is increasingly infrastructural. Control depends on layers that are expensive, dull and slow to build.
The gap between aspiration and capability is now the story. A sovereign position requires public procurement, energy capacity, compute, talent, security standards and a market that rewards European infrastructure.
The considered question is not whether Europe wants autonomy. It is whether it can accept the cost and compromise that real autonomy requires.