Published 2025-12-26 | Version v1.0
Policy BriefOpenPublished

Artificial Intelligence as National Power

Implications of the 2025 U.S. National Security Strategy

Description

This policy brief analyzes the treatment of artificial intelligence in the 2025 U.S. National Security Strategy. It argues that AI is repositioned as a foundational state capability and a cross-domain force multiplier embedded in military power, economic security, technological sovereignty, alliance management, and standards-setting. The brief interprets the strategy as a move from universal AI governance toward capability-driven, sovereign, and alliance-centered AI state capacity.

Abstract

This policy brief examines the implications of the 2025 U.S. National Security Strategy for global AI governance and national power. It argues that the NSS treats artificial intelligence not as an emerging technology but as a foundational state capability linked to military effectiveness, economic resilience, technological sovereignty, alliance alignment, and standards-setting. The analysis identifies a shift from AI regulation toward AI state capacity, interprets the document's limited attention to AI risk governance as strategic silence, and concludes that global AI governance is moving into a fragmented, security-driven, post-breakthrough phase in which political and institutional risks increasingly supersede purely technical risks.

Files

PDF preview

Keywords

  • Artificial intelligence
  • AI national power
  • 2025 U.S. National Security Strategy
  • U.S. national security
  • AI state capacity
  • AI governance
  • AI–State Complex
  • Technology sovereignty
  • Alliance-centric AI strategy
  • AI standards
  • Digital power
  • Supply-chain control
  • Export controls
  • Technology blocs
  • National security exceptions
  • Global AI governance fragmentation
  • Post-breakthrough AI development
  • Institutional lock-in
  • Political risk
  • EPINOVA

Subjects

  • AI governance
  • National security strategy
  • Strategic studies
  • Technology policy
  • U.S. foreign policy
  • International relations
  • Digital sovereignty
  • Geopolitics of AI
  • Standards governance
  • Alliance politics
  • Economic security
  • Technology competition
  • Public policy

Recommended citation

Wu, S.-Y. (2025). Artificial intelligence as national power: Implications of the 2025 U.S. National Security Strategy (EPINOVA-2025-02-PB). EPINOVA Policy Brief Series on AI-Enabled Warfare, Sustainability, and Global Security Governance. Global AI Governance Research Center, EPINOVA LLC. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18063602. DOI: To be assigned after Crossref membership approval.

APA citation

Wu, S.-Y. (2025). Artificial intelligence as national power: Implications of the 2025 U.S. National Security Strategy (Policy Brief No. EPINOVA-2025-02-PB). Global AI Governance Research Center, EPINOVA LLC. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18063602. DOI: To be assigned after Crossref membership approval.

Alternate identifiers

SchemeIdentifierDescription
DOI10.5281/zenodo.18063602Zenodo/DataCite DOI stated in the PDF and early ORCID-derived metadata record
ORCID put-code201017536ORCID Public API record identifier from early metadata
EPINOVA policy brief numberEPINOVA–2025–02–PBPolicy brief number printed in the PDF
File nameArtificial Intelligence as National Power Implications of the 2025 U.S. National Security Strategy.pdfSource PDF file name
Short titleArtificial Intelligence as National PowerShort form of the policy brief title

Related works

RelationIdentifierTypeDescription
Related EPINOVA policy brief in the same 2025 policy brief series on AI-enabled warfare, sustainability, and global security governance10.5281/zenodo.18037881

References

  1. White House. (2025). National Security Strategy of the United States of America (November 2025). Washington, DC.