Russia has nuclear advances for an AI era, top arms control diplomat says

Russia has nuclear advances for an AI era, top arms control diplomat says

World

Russia has nuclear advances for an AI era, top arms control diplomat says

Follow on
Follow us on Google News
 

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia's top diplomat for arms control said on Tuesday that Russia had made advances in nuclear deterrence that would allow it to ensure its security for decades to come even in an era dominated by advances in Artificial Intelligence.

Asked at a conference in Moscow if Russia could ensure nuclear security in an era of AI competition, Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said it could.

"In recent years, such groundwork has been done in the field of nuclear deterrence that will allow us to ensure our own security for decades to come," Ryabkov, Russia's arms control point man, said.

Ryabkov also oversees relations with the US, which diplomats in both countries say are at their lowest point since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis due to a confrontation over the conflict in Ukraine.
He warned that if the West underestimated Moscow's resolve, it could lead to "tragic and fatal" consequences because the US and its allies were confronting a major nuclear power - Russia.

Ryabkov said the West underestimated "Russia's readiness to stand up for itself and ensure its own interests in any situation."

"I don't even want to assume that this underestimation could become tragic and fatal," he said.

He said Russia had the resources to convey signals to the West in the field of nuclear deterrence but there was a danger the West could make a mistake.

"There is a danger, it cannot be underestimated, that their side may make a mistake. We will try not to," he said.

"Our common task is to prevent the world and the multipolar world, above all, from sliding into nuclear chaos," Ryabkov said.