U.S. rejects international AI oversight at U.N. General Assembly



NEW YORK โ€” The United States clashed with world leaders over artificial intelligence at the United Nations General Assembly this week, rejecting calls for global oversight as many pushed for new collaborative frameworks.

While many heads of state, corporate leaders and prominent figures endorsed a need for urgent international collaboration on AI, the U.S. delegation criticized the role of the U.N. and pushed back on the idea of centralized governance of AI.

Representing the U.S. in Wednesdayโ€™s Security Council meeting on AI, Michael Kratsios, the director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, said, โ€œWe totally reject all efforts by international bodies to assert centralized control and global governance of AI.โ€

The path to a flourishing future powered by AI does not lie in โ€œbureaucratic management,โ€ Kratsios said, but instead in โ€œthe independence and sovereignty of nations.โ€

While Kratsios shot down the idea of combined AI governance, President Donald Trump said in his speech to the General Assembly on Tuesday that the White House will be โ€œpioneering an AI verification system that everyone can trustโ€ to enforce the Biological Weapons Convention.

โ€œHopefully, the U.N. can play a constructive role, and it will also be one of the early projects under AI,โ€ Trump said. AI โ€œcould be one of the great things ever, but it also can be dangerous, but it can be put to tremendous use and tremendous good.โ€

In a statement to NBC News, a State Department spokesperson said, โ€œThe United States supports like-minded nations working together to encourage the development of AI in line with our shared values. The US position in international bodies is to vigorously advocate for international AI governance approaches that promote innovation, reflect American values, and counter authoritarian influence.โ€

The comments rejecting collaborative efforts around AI governance stood in stark contrast to many of the initiatives being launched at the General Assembly.

On Thursday, the U.N. introduced the Global Dialogue on AI Governance, the U.N.โ€™s first body dedicated to AI governance involving all member states. U.N. Secretary-General Antรณnio Guterres said the body would โ€œlay the cornerstones of a global AI ecosystem that can keep pace with the fastest-moving technology in human history.โ€ Speaking after Guterres, Nobel Prize recipient Daron Acemoglu outlined the growing stakes of AIโ€™s rapid development, arguing that โ€œAI is the biggest threat that humanity has faced.โ€

But in an interview with NBC News, Amandeep Singh Gill, the U.N.โ€™s special envoy for digital and emerging technologies, said that the United Statesโ€™ critical perception of the U.N.โ€™s role in international AI governance was misconstrued.

โ€œI think itโ€™s a misrepresentation to say that the U.N. is somehow getting into the regulation of AI,โ€ Gill said. โ€œThese are not top-down power grabs in terms of regulation. The regulation stays where regulation can be done in sovereign jurisdictions.โ€

Instead, the U.N.โ€™s mechanisms โ€œwill provide platforms for international cooperation on AI governance,โ€ Gill said.

In remarks immediately following Kratsiosโ€™ comments, Chinaโ€™s Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Ma Zhaoxu said, โ€œIt is vital to jointly foster an open, inclusive, fair and nondiscriminatory environment for technological development and firmly oppose unilateralism and protectionism.โ€

โ€œWe support the U.N. playing a central role in AI governance,โ€ Ma said.

One day after Kratsiosโ€™ remarks at the Security Council, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sรกnchez seemed to push back on Kratsios and gave full-throated support for international cooperation on AI and the U.N.โ€™s role in AI governance.

โ€œWe need to coordinate a shared vision of AI at a global level, with the U.N. as the legitimate and inclusive forum to forge consensus around common interests,โ€ Sรกnchez said. โ€œThe time is now, when multilateralism is being most questioned and attacked, that we need to reaffirm how suitable it is in addressing challenges such as those represented by AI.โ€

Reacting to the weekโ€™s developments, Renan Araujo, director of programs for the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for AI Policy and Strategy, told NBC News that โ€œno one wants to see a burdensome, bureaucratic governance structure, and the U.S. has succeeded in starting bilateral and minilateral coalitions. At the same time, we should expect AI-related challenges to become more transnational in nature as AI capabilities become more advanced.โ€

This is not the first time the U.N. has addressed AI, having passed the Global Digital Compact last year. The compact laid the foundation for the AI dialogue and for an independent international scientific panel to evaluate AIโ€™s abilities, risks and pathways forward. Guterres announced that nominations to this panel are now open.

While Thursdayโ€™s event marked the launch of the global dialogue and panel, the dialogue will have its first full meeting in Geneva in summer 2026, in tandem with the International Telecommunication Unionโ€™s annual AI for Good summit. The dialogueโ€™s exact functions and first actions will be charted out over the coming months.

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