Introduction
As artificial intelligence rapidly evolves into the defining technology of the 21st century, it is reshaping the landscape of U.S.-China relations in unprecedented ways. How do leading Chinese experts assess the intersection of AI competition and shared security risks? What realistic opportunities exist for bilateral cooperation amid escalating strategic rivalry? And what frameworks can manage the existential threats posed by unregulated AI development? Recorded against the backdrop of President Donald Trump's visit to China, the first episode of SinoAI Insights, a new podcast launched by the Center for International Security and Strategy, Tsinghua University (CISS), explores the dual nature of AI as both a driver of great-power competition and a catalyst for necessary cooperation, offering a comprehensive Chinese perspective on the future of U.S.-China relations in the AI era.
Shownotes
01:53 Expectations for the AI agenda at the summit
05:30 When AI meets the "nuclear button"
07:23 Shared U.S.-China AI risks under the shadow of chip export controls
09:54 Beyond "human-in-the-loop" paradigm
12:55 How to overcome the security dilemma of defensive R&D
14:28 Non-state actors and the misuse of AI
17:53 The three most urgent AI security frontiers shared by China and the U.S.
20:49 Chinese industry perspectives on AI risk and governance
24:15 Distillation: Technical Tool or Political ladder?
27:17 Will technological competition undermine scientific collaboration and open innovation?
29:55 In favor of functional cooperation to a unified governance architecture
34:00 What kind of crisis management mechanisms are more resilient?
36:48 Are Chinese scholars still optimistic about the future of AI governance?
Team
Executive Producer:XIAO Qian
Producer:WANG Yexu、LIU Yuan
Podcast Editor:WANG Yexu
Content Assistant:ZHONG Junwen
Graphics Designer:XU Ruijia
