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BackAI is Transforming Warfare, Leading to Increased Global Conflict
AI is Transforming Warfare, Leading to Increased Global Conflict
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SCMP Economy5 sa önceMonde3 dk okumaChina

AI is Transforming Warfare, Leading to Increased Global Conflict

L'essentiel

  • The Global Peace Index reveals a world becoming less peaceful, with AI enabling faster, cheaper, and more lethal warfare.
  • Conflicts are increasing, and military spending is at a record high, with AI predicted to worsen global instability.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

The latest Global Peace Index indicates a global decline in peace since 2008, with increasing conflicts and displacement. AI's role in warfare is a significant factor in this trend.

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How AI is changing the nature of war and conflict

Latest Global Peace Index reflects a world progressively less peaceful as AI enables armies to kill more people more quickly and more cheaply

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David Dodwell is CEO of the trade policy and international relations consultancy Strategic Access.

Published: 4:30pm, 10 Jul 2026

As US President Donald Trump flew home from a fractious Nato summit in Turkey, he was poised to resume the war with Iran, whose leaders he labelled “sick” and “scum”. Trump also complained about European leaders’ failure to spend enough on arms, support him in Iran and recognise the need for the US to take control of Greenland. The sense of rising global conflict has been palpable this week.

What clearly showed at the summit of the transatlantic security alliance was confirmed by the latest Global Peace Index, released last month by the Sydney-based Institute for Economics and Peace. The report, which covers 163 economies and has been published every year since 2008, calculates that 119 economies have become less peaceful since 2008, with 103 involved in at least one external conflict over the past five years, and the number of active, state-based conflicts reaching 61 – the highest since the second world war.

More than 181,000 people were killed in conflicts in 2025, with some 117 million displaced. Global military spending reached a record US$2.9 trillion. The report estimates the total economic cost of the violence at US$21.8 trillion, or 10.5 per cent of the global gross domestic product.

More alarmingly still, the report predicts a steady deterioration in the coming decades, not just because of Trumpian bellicosity and chronic conflict across sub-Saharan Africa, but because of the rapid deployment of artificial intelligence (AI) in shaping how conflicts evolve.

In the chilling language of war, it sees AI “compressing the kill chain, lowering the marginal cost of lethality and concentrating compute and capital in a handful of firms and states”. In short, AI is enabling armies to kill more people more quickly and more cheaply.

While seven of the world’s 10 most peaceful countries are in Europe, much of the increase in worldwide military spending was also in Europe. This seeming paradox is explained by the region’s sharp re-militarisation since Russia’s war in Ukraine and Trump’s pressure on Nato members to lift military spending.

À surveiller

Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • Global conflicts will intensify due to AI's role in warfare.

    Probable

  • Military spending will continue to rise.

    Très probable

Questions ouvertes

  • How will AI development be regulated in warfare?
  • What specific AI technologies are being deployed?
  • What are the long-term economic consequences of AI-driven conflict?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by SCMP Economy.

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