
"Precision U.S. airstrikes against Iran's nuclear program last June demonstrate American technological prowess built on decades of 20th Century Cold War Era investment and innovation."
"Opportunities (and Risks) of Buyer Alliances Much of Washington's bipartisan consensus on the necessity of American technology leadership has rightly focused on the nation's capacity to "build the future" at home, safely beyond China's sphere of predation in East Asia, creating American jobs and national wealth, and on terms that ensure these technologies reflect American values."
"But the other side of the 21st Century innovation race is a sprint to forge strong alliances abroad, with buyers who will accelerate domestic efforts by investing in, buying, deploying, and fine tuning U.S. innovations at a greater scale and profit than would ever be possible were U.S. builders limited to merely selling to U.S. government agencies and corporations at home."
Precision U.S. airstrikes against Iran's nuclear program last June reflect technological capabilities grounded in decades of Cold War–era investment and innovation. The United States continues to originate new technologies while competing with China and Russia to lead in AI, quantum computing, robotics, semiconductors, cyber, and other frontier technologies. Prevailing in this geopolitical struggle requires building and maintaining networks of allied investors, customers, and collaborators to accelerate innovation and deployment. Buyer alliances abroad can amplify domestic initiatives like the CHIPS Act by investing in, purchasing, deploying, and fine-tuning U.S. innovations at greater scale and profitability than domestic markets alone.
Read at The Cipher Brief
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]