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The U.S. strategy treats AI not just as technology, but as a foundational tool for global influence. By creating a dominant 'tech umbrella,' it aims to forge alliances and exert power in a way analogous to how its military has secured its global standing since WWII, making AI the new core of its national power.

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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 White House's Michael Kratsios reframes "AI sovereignty" as owning American-built hardware and infrastructure, not renting access to US cloud models. This strategy encourages partner nations to buy the AI stack ("They build it. It's yours.") rather than remaining dependent on subscriptions.

The competition in AI infrastructure is framed as a binary, geopolitical choice. The future will be dominated by either a US-led AI stack or a Chinese one. This perspective positions edge infrastructure companies as critical players in national security and technological dominance.

The conversation around AI and government has evolved past regulation. Now, the immense demand for power and hardware to fuel AI development directly influences international policy, resource competition, and even provides justification for military actions, making AI a core driver of geopolitics.

The US and China have divergent AI strategies. The US is pouring capital into massive compute clusters to build dominant global platforms like ChatGPT (aggregation theory). China is focusing its capital on building a self-sufficient, domestic semiconductor and AI supply chain to ensure technological independence.

The U.S. may be allowing other nations freedom in using its AI models, mirroring its strategy with the U.S. dollar. The goal is to encourage widespread adoption first, creating a dependency that allows the U.S. to later regulate use cases through its domestic laws, much like it imposes financial sanctions.

The feeling that AI development is a "race" is unique to this tech era. According to Aetherflux founder Baiju Bhat, this urgency is fueled by geopolitical competition between the U.S. and China, who both view AI leadership as a national strategic priority, unlike previous consumer-focused tech waves.

The guest argues that without the massive GDP growth and efficiency gains promised by AI, the U.S. is on a path to being surpassed by China as the world hegemon by 2030. AI is not just an economic boom; it's a geopolitical necessity for maintaining America's global standing.

The new "American AI Exports Program" and "Tech Corps" initiative mirror the strategy used to compete with Huawei's 5G dominance. By offering attractive financing and on-the-ground training, the US aims to provide developing nations a complete solution to build AI capabilities with American technology.

The U.S. government is actively promoting stablecoins and U.S.-based AI to extend its global influence. This strategy shifts from projecting power through military presence to technological and financial dominance, ensuring the dollar and American culture remain central to the global system.

The US is Positioning AI as a Geopolitical 'Anchor Asset' to Replace Military Dominance | RiffOn