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 Iran’s President Sends a Message That Could Reshape the Middle East

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian has sent a message to...

AI in the War Room: How Artificial Intelligence Is Reshaping U.S. Diplomacy

Artificial intelligence is quietly transforming the way America approaches foreign policy, with researchers and government agencies exploring its potential to shape negotiations, monitor ceasefires, and even prevent wars.
At the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, D.C., the Futures Lab is leading this shift. With Pentagon backing, the lab is testing AI tools like GPT-4o and Claude to simulate crisis scenarios and propose diplomatic strategies. Unlike earlier uses of AI for mundane tasks like drafting speeches, today’s focus is on high-stakes decision-making, including conflict resolution and peace treaty development.
In a recent study, AI models were asked to navigate crisis scenarios involving potential military conflict. Some models leaned heavily toward peaceful resolutions, while others were more prone to escalate tensions. These variances, researchers say, stem from the biases of the developers and the data used to train the models — a reminder that AI outputs reflect human inputs.
CSIS also launched “Strategic Headwinds,” an AI program that analyzes past peace treaties and current events to help identify negotiation paths in conflicts like the war in Ukraine. This fast-paced approach to diplomacy contrasts with traditional, drawn-out peace talks — and may prove more effective in volatile, rapidly evolving conflicts.
Experts see both promise and pitfalls. AI could enhance diplomatic planning, simulate adversary behavior, and automate tasks once handled by large teams. But concerns remain: AI lacks emotional intelligence, struggles with nuance, and may misinterpret geopolitical language without targeted training.
Critics warn that AI thrives in open societies but falters in closed regimes like North Korea or Russia, where data is limited. Others argue that while AI can support negotiations, it cannot replace the power of human relationships or strategic judgment shaped by history.
Still, proponents believe the technology is here to stay — and improving rapidly. Whether AI becomes a trusted advisor or an overhyped gimmick will depend on how it’s trained, tested, and deployed.

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