Requires the President to report non-binding instruments related to the AUKUS partnership. Mandates biennial reports on AI and other tech collaboration under Pillar Two, assessing efforts in AI, quantum, cyber, and other advanced capabilities.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding statutory provision enacted by the U.S. Congress that creates mandatory reporting obligations on the President and Secretary of State with specific timelines and enforcement through congressional oversight.
The document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains, with only subdomain 6.4 (Competitive dynamics) showing implicit coverage through its focus on strategic military AI collaboration. The document primarily addresses reporting requirements for the AUKUS partnership rather than AI risk mitigation.
The document primarily governs National Security sector activities related to the AUKUS partnership, with secondary coverage of Scientific Research and Development Services through AI and quantum technology collaboration. It does not regulate private sector AI development but rather international defense technology cooperation.
The document does not directly govern specific AI lifecycle stages but requires reporting on AI collaboration efforts under AUKUS Pillar Two. The focus is on strategic assessment and reporting of AI technology collaboration rather than technical development or deployment processes.
The document explicitly mentions artificial intelligence as one of eight trilateral lines of effort under AUKUS Pillar Two, requiring assessment of collaboration efforts. However, it does not define AI models, systems, or specify technical characteristics such as compute thresholds or model types.
United States Congress
This is a section of the Department of State Authorization Act of 2023, which is proposed and enacted by the U.S. Congress as indicated by the legislative format and statutory language.
appropriate congressional committees; United States Congress
Congressional committees serve as the enforcement mechanism through their oversight authority, receiving mandatory reports and having the power to ensure compliance with statutory reporting requirements.
appropriate congressional committees; United States Congress
Congressional committees monitor implementation through biennial reports that assess progress on AUKUS partnership activities, including AI and technology collaboration efforts.
The President; The Secretary (of State); Secretary of Defense; other appropriate heads of agencies
The document explicitly places reporting obligations on the President and the Secretary of State (in coordination with the Secretary of Defense and other agency heads) regarding AUKUS partnership activities including AI collaboration.