US and China can find common ground on AI risks

An author attending the Asia Leaders Series in Zurich, Switzerland, suggests the US and China could cooperate on AI risks, similar to their 1972 alignment against a shared threat. The forum's discussions revealed that current global strains are normal rather than exceptional.

The author traveled to Zurich, Switzerland, last month to attend the Asia Leaders Series, a forum designed to foster candid exchanges between Europe and Asia. It offers policymakers, economists, and business leaders a trusted setting to engage seriously with global challenges. The author approached the event with modest expectations, as strategic competition between Washington and Beijing has dominated such forums for years. Numerous panels have examined trade wars, export controls, and military tensions, with arguments often recycling.

Yet the discussion proved unexpectedly revealing. One former senior diplomat challenged the mood of anxiety that often frames such debates. He argued that today's world may feel chaotic, but history suggests otherwise. Periods of strain in the international order are not aberrations; they are closer to the norm. Alliances come under pressure. Rivalries intensify. The system adjusts.

That observation prompted a broader question: if a shared adversary once brought Washington and Beijing into alignment, what might play a comparable role today? The article's title and description indicate that AI's risks could serve as such a factor, much like the 1972 meeting between Beijing and Washington to manage the Soviet threat. Today's leaders can cooperate to shape the rules of AI.

Keywords include Hong Kong, Europe, Cold War, Asia Leaders Series, US-China rivalry, China, Soviet Union, Washington, Beijing, World Economic Forum, United States, AI, Zurich. The piece was published on February 19, 2026.

Mga Kaugnay na Artikulo

Health ministers from South Korea, China, and Japan shaking hands on AI-driven health cooperation agreement at Seoul meeting.
Larawang ginawa ng AI

South Korea, China, and Japan agree on AI-driven health cooperation

Iniulat ng AI Larawang ginawa ng AI

Heads of health authorities from South Korea, China, and Japan agreed to bolster trilateral cooperation on universal health coverage and mental health using AI and digital technologies at the 18th Tripartite Health Ministers' Meeting in Seoul. The pact comes amid diplomatic tensions between Tokyo and Beijing over Taiwan. The dialogue originated in 2007 from joint efforts on pandemic influenza preparedness.

Washington and Beijing must engage on the dangers and opportunities of AI amid rapid development, or it would be irresponsible. An opinion piece highlights progress in AI and nuclear security talks but calls for sustained senior-level diplomacy.

Iniulat ng AI

Sam Daws, senior adviser to the Oxford Martin AI Governance Initiative, recently visited China and expressed excitement over its AI and industrial innovations. He warned that Western anxieties about China's rise should not lead to decoupling, advocating instead for dialogue to build mutual trust.

Despite rising international tensions, countries still seek cooperation based on shared interests. An opinion piece in the South China Morning Post argues that multilateral institutions must embrace this trend to address today's economically diffuse, environmentally constrained, and politically fragmented world.

Iniulat ng AI

The European Union has excluded Chinese organizations from its most advanced collaborative technology programs, covering fields like artificial intelligence, quantum technologies, semiconductors, and biotechnology. The EU cites concerns over research security and potential military applications. Chinese space scientist Wu Ji expresses doubt that the policy will significantly harm China and suggests it may instead isolate Europe further.

Researchers warn of malicious AI agents that could usher in a new phase in the global information war. To prevent this, they call for tough measures against the creators of such systems.

Iniulat ng AI

After witnessing the effects of a tumultuous trade war with the United States this year, China's top leaders have issued a directive to fortify the domestic economy against persistent or even heightened trade frictions. Analysts see the leadership's language after the central economic work conference as an admission that trade tensions are expected to endure and expand beyond the US, including to partners like the European Union.

 

 

 

Gumagamit ng cookies ang website na ito

Gumagamit kami ng cookies para sa analytics upang mapabuti ang aming site. Basahin ang aming patakaran sa privacy para sa higit pang impormasyon.
Tanggihan