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A purely cooperative approach to AI arms control with China is unlikely to work due to their inherent skepticism. A more effective realpolitik strategy may be for the U.S. to advance its AI capabilities so far and fast that China feels compelled to negotiate out of self-interest to avoid being hopelessly behind.
The dispute highlights a core tension for democracies: how to compete with authoritarian states like China, which can command its AI labs without debate. The pressure to maintain a military edge may force the U.S. to adopt more coercive policies towards its own private tech companies, compromising the free market principles it aims to defend.
The US believes a 10x increase in training compute will make its proprietary models 'twice as capable.' This widening performance gap is a strategic lever intended to make aligning with the American AI stack an unavoidable choice for nations seeking competitive advantages, forcing them to overlook sovereignty concerns.
The same governments pushing AI competition for a strategic edge may be forced into cooperation. As AI democratizes access to catastrophic weapons (CBRN), the national security risk will become so great that even rival superpowers will have a mutual incentive to create verifiable safety treaties.
Dario Amodei frames AI chip export controls not as a permanent blockade, but as a strategic play for leverage. The goal is to ensure that when the world eventually negotiates the "rules of the road" for the post-AGI era, democratic nations are in a stronger bargaining position relative to authoritarian states like China.
The development of AI won't stop because of game theory. For competing nations like the US and China, the risk of falling behind is greater than the collective risk of developing the technology. This dynamic makes the AI race an unstoppable force, mirroring the Cold War nuclear arms race and rendering calls for a pause futile.
The immense strategic advantage offered by AI ensures its development will continue, regardless of safety concerns from insiders. Much like the Manhattan Project, which proceeded despite catastrophic risk, the logic of "if we don't, China will" makes unilateral cessation of research impossible for any major power.
A zero-tolerance policy on selling advanced AI chips to China might be strategically shortsighted. Allowing some sales could build a degree of dependence within China's ecosystem. This dependence then becomes a powerful point of leverage that the U.S. could exploit in a future crisis, a weapon it wouldn't have if China were forced into total self-sufficiency from the start.
International AI treaties, particularly with nations like China, are unlikely to hold based on trust alone. A stable agreement requires a mutually-assured-destruction-style dynamic, meaning the U.S. must develop and signal credible offensive capabilities to deter cheating.
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei's writing proposes using an AI advantage to 'make China an offer they can't refuse,' forcing them to abandon competition with democracies. The host argues this is an extremely reckless position that fuels an arms race dynamic, especially when other leaders like Google's Demis Hassabis consistently call for international collaboration.
As US LLMs achieve capabilities China can't match due to compute limitations, China may restrict access to critical rare earths. This move would be a strategic play to pressure the US into sharing its most advanced AI technology, linking resource control with tech parity.