China report lists top 5 global risks, with US responsible for most of them

Hi-tech constraints, geopolitical moves and supply chain actions by the US, as well as its presidential election, are likely to pose "prominent risks" to the world this year, a leading think tank affiliated with China's top intelligence agency has warned.

In a report released on Tuesday, the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations (CICIR) said global development and security would continue to face various risks and challenges, "with uncertainties and instabilities becoming intertwined".

According to the influential research institution, which comes under the Ministry of State Security, two of its identified top five risks to world peace and stability are directly attributed to the US, which is also a target for blame in the remainder.

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The report landed with Washington and Beijing still locking horns over a wide spectrum of differences, from the Taiwan Strait through the South China Sea to human rights issues, along with trade, sanctions and semiconductors.

Nevertheless, since the November summit between US President Joe Biden and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, the two powers have been bidding to stabilise relations from their most confrontational point in their 45 years of official ties.

According to the CICIR, one of the main risks for 2024 is "an intelligence gap" that has been created by a few countries, particularly the US, which "views intelligence superiority as a key variable in consolidating its hegemony".

The report pointed to US export controls and sanctions against China's chip design companies and its access to artificial intelligence chips.

"If countries prioritise their individual security needs over common security and develop incompatible and incomprehensible military intelligence systems, the risk of rapid escalation of conflicts and crises among major powers ... may intensify."

The authors pointed out that US troops could be increasingly capable of destroying all of their opponents' forces simultaneously in the age of military intelligence.

"The higher the likelihood of achieving this, the more likely both sides are to consider firing the first shot in conflicts during times of crisis," they said.

Washington and Beijing agreed during the Xi-Biden summit in San Francisco two months ago to improve AI safety through China-US government talks.