Skip to content
Longterm Wiki
Back

Understanding China's AI Strategy | CNAS

web

Credibility Rating

4/5
High(4)

High quality. Established institution or organization with editorial oversight and accountability.

Rating inherited from publication venue: CNAS

A CNAS policy report relevant to AI governance researchers tracking geopolitical competition in AI, particularly U.S.-China dynamics that shape international coordination prospects and AI safety governance frameworks.

Metadata

Importance: 62/100organizational reportanalysis

Summary

This CNAS report analyzes China's national strategy for artificial intelligence development, examining its military, economic, and geopolitical dimensions. It explores how China's government directives, private sector investment, and state planning shape AI capabilities and deployment. The report provides policy recommendations for the United States in responding to China's AI ambitions.

Key Points

  • China has articulated a comprehensive national AI strategy through state planning documents like the 2017 New Generation AI Development Plan, targeting global AI leadership by 2030.
  • Chinese AI development blurs civil-military boundaries, with commercial AI research explicitly directed toward military modernization and national security applications.
  • China's data advantages, state subsidies, and centralized coordination give it structural advantages but also create risks from lack of transparency and accountability.
  • U.S. policymakers must understand China's AI ecosystem holistically—including academia, industry, and military—to craft effective competitive and cooperative responses.
  • The report highlights concerns about AI applications in surveillance, autonomous weapons, and information operations as areas of particular strategic risk.

Cited by 1 page

PageTypeQuality
Deep Learning Revolution EraHistorical44.0

Cached Content Preview

HTTP 200Fetched Feb 22, 202684 KB
Understanding China's AI Strategy | CNAS 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 

 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 Introduction

 In the second half of 2018, I traveled to China on four separate trips to attend major diplomatic, military, and private-sector conferences focusing on Artificial Intelligence (AI). During these trips, I participated in a series of meetings with high-ranking Chinese officials in China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, leaders of China’s military AI research organizations, government think tank experts, and corporate executives at Chinese AI companies. From these discussions – as well as my ongoing work analyzing China’s AI industry, policies, reports, and programs – I have arrived at a number of key judgments about Chinese leadership’s views, strategies, and prospects for AI as it applies to China’s economy and national security. Of course, China’s leadership in this area is a large population with diversity in its views, and any effort to generalize is inherently presumptuous and essentially guaranteed to oversimplify. However, the distance is large between prevailing views in American commentary on China’s AI efforts and what I have come to believe are the facts. I hope by stating my takeaways directly, this report will advance the assessment of this issue and be of benefit to the wider U.S. policymaking community.

 
 
 
 
 Chinese Views on the Importance of AI

 1. China’s leadership – including President Xi Jinping – believes that being at the forefront in AI technology is critical to the future of global military and economic power competition. 

 In July 2017, China’s State Council issued the New Generation Artificial Intelligence Development Plan (AIDP). 1 This document – along with Made in China 2025 , 2 released in May 2015 – form the core of China’s AI strategy. Both documents, as well as the issue of AI more generally, have received significant and sustained attention from the highest levels of China’s leadership, including Xi Jinping. Total Chinese national and local government spending on AI to implement these plans is not publicly disclosed, but it is clearly in the tens of billions of dollars. At least two 3 Chinese regional governments have each committed to investing 100 billion yuan (~$14.7 billion USD). 4 The opening paragraphs of the AIDP exemplify mainstream Chinese views regarding AI:

 AI has become a new focus of international competition. AI is a strategic technology that will lead in the future; the world’s major developed countries are taking the development of AI as a major strategy to enhance national competitiveness and protect national security. 5 

 The above quote also reflects how China’s AI policy community 6 is paying close attention to the AI industries and policies of other countries, particularly the United States. Chinese government organizations routinely translate, disseminate, and analyze U.S. government and think tank reports about AI. In my conversations with Chinese o

... (truncated, 84 KB total)
Resource ID: 09254956fb338f91 | Stable ID: MmUzZDY2Mj