Henry Kissinger says the U.S. and China are in a ‘classic pre-World War I situation’ that could lead to conflict, but A.I. makes this ‘not a normal circumstance

The U.S. and China represent the “greatest dangers to peace right now” if their animosities escalate to a military confrontation, Kissinger said in an interview with The Economist published Wednesday. The two countries are heading toward a major confrontation, he said, as both nations have “convinced themselves that the other represents a strategic danger.”

Tensions over Taiwan are likely to be a major flashpoint for future conflict, as President Joe Biden has signaled the U.S. would aid the island nation if China invades to reconquer what it considers a breakaway state. But much like with nuclear weapons during the Cold War, the world is now perfecting a new technology—A.I.—that may be too dangerous to even consider deploying militarily.

“[China and America] are two powers of the type where, historically, a military confrontation was inevitable. But this is not a normal circumstance, because of mutually assured destruction and artificial intelligence,” Kissinger said.

U.S.-China relations are now at a low point. They started declining after the Trump administration imposed strict trade tariffs on China that have continued under the Biden administration. More recently, the two sides have clashed over China’s intellectual property theft from U.S. companies, Chinese President Xi Jinping’s close relationship with Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, and the rising risk of China invading Taiwan.  

Read more at 

https://fortune.com/2023/05/18/henry-kissinger-us-china-conflict-ai/

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