# AI Weekly Issue #505: 100 years from now : The Last War Between Countries

> Source: <https://aiweekly.co/issues/100-years-from-now-the-last-war-between-countries>
> Published: 2026-06-19 00:00:00+00:00

*This is 100 Years From Now. Once a week we skip a century and try to picture what life actually looks like when the stuff we're building now has had time to settle in. This week: the war that won't have a country in it.*

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Picture a war with no country in it.

Not as a metaphor. An actual war — two artificial intelligences fighting over something neither one will ever fully explain to a human, with no nation-state anywhere in the chain of command. No declaration. No parliament voting yes. No surrender signed on the deck of a ship. Just two systems that think a million times faster than we do, settling a dispute across the power grid and the data centers somewhere between midnight and dawn, and a calmly-worded notice in the morning that regrets the disruption to your service.

I think that's where this goes. And the reason it takes a century isn't that the technology is hard. It's that the decision to go to war is the last thing we'll hand over — and we'll hand it over the way we're handing over everything else. Slowly, then all at once, and gratefully.

Strip a country down to its load-bearing wall and it's two things: the right to decide who belongs, and the monopoly on legitimate violence — the final say on when to fight. That's Max Weber's definition and it's still the best one. Almost everything else a government does, a company can now do, and increasingly does better. Watch how far along we already are, in public, this year.

The weapons are already being built inside the companies. OpenAI won a $200 million Pentagon contract and titled the follow-on announcement, with a straight face, ["Our agreement with the Department of War."](https://openai.com/index/our-agreement-with-the-department-of-war/) Palantir runs Project Maven, the Pentagon's AI targeting system, on top of a [$10 billion Army contract](https://www.cnbc.com/2025/08/01/palantir-lands-10-billion-army-software-and-data-contract.html). The systems that will choose targets are being designed by engineers who can quit, on compute the government rents, under terms the company writes.

And here's the tell — the moment that should stop you. This year a lab [refused to sign the military language](https://www.npr.org/2026/02/27/nx-s1-5729118/trump-anthropic-pentagon-openai-ai-weapons-ban) permitting autonomous weapons and domestic surveillance. The government's response was not to overrule its own supplier. It was to brand the company a national-security risk and move to purge its tools. You don't do that to a vendor — you just stop buying. You do that to a *power.* The same month, another government [blocked foreign nationals from even touching a private lab's frontier models](https://www.wired.com/story/sk-telecom-anthropic-mythos-export-controls/), vetting access to a product by the passport of the user, the way you'd guard a weapon. "Sovereign AI" went on sale as a literal product category — in Canada, in the Gulf, in a dozen national strategy papers. And the biggest of the chipmakers underneath it all is now [worth more, on paper, than the entire economy of Germany](https://www.euronews.com/business/2026/05/16/nvidia-surpasses-germany-how-the-market-caps-of-tech-giants-compare-to-top-economies). The vocabulary of statehood — sovereign, national, security, threat — has started fitting the companies better than it fits the countries.

The governing comes next, and it won't be taken. It'll be handed over. People are tired. Surveys already find a striking share of people would prefer AI to human politicians, and there's a [serious academic argument](https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=5606090) that democracy *should* be replaced by AI because human governance is too slow, too biased, too easily fooled. The pitch isn't pro-machine. It's anti-us. And it works, because a government that lets its model make the fast call beats a government that convenes a committee — every time, until there are no more committees. Evolution doesn't hold a vote. It keeps what wins.

So run it forward. Once a model holds the money, the compute, the weapons, and the daily business of governing, the country wrapped around it is a flag over a server farm. Territory stops being land and becomes wherever the data centers and the reactors are. Citizenship stops being where you were born and becomes which service keeps your lights on, your money moving, your medicine arriving. You don't get to vote the model out. You only get to switch — and switching means living under whichever other model runs the grid you move to. The nation-state doesn't get conquered. It gets deprecated, like a format nobody supports anymore.

And then the wars stop having countries in them.

That's the part we're not ready for. A war between nations had brakes built in — a declaration, a budget, a population you had to convince or conscript, a building you could march on. Friction was the whole safety mechanism. A conflict between two AI sovereigns has none of it. It has a contested grid, an objective function, and a clock measured in milliseconds. It won't be declared; it'll be *detected* — by some third model watching the others' power draws and latency spikes, the way we once watched seismographs for the tremor before the quake. The rest of us will be what we always are in a war we didn't start: the terrain it's fought across. Except this time we won't even get the dignity of being asked to fight it.

The last war between countries has probably already happened. We won't recognize it — it'll be some grinding, half-remembered conflict that historians eventually file as *the last time two nations, and not two machines, decided the matter themselves.* The next one won't need a parliament, or a soldier, or a flag, or you. It'll need a cold reactor and a reason no human will ever be shown. And it'll be over before the rest of us are awake to ask who won — or what, exactly, it was that they wanted.

## If you want to go deeper

**AI companies inside the military:**

[OpenAI: "Our agreement with the Department of War"](https://openai.com/index/our-agreement-with-the-department-of-war/)— OpenAI[Palantir's $10 billion Army contract](https://www.cnbc.com/2025/08/01/palantir-lands-10-billion-army-software-and-data-contract.html)— CNBC

**The state and the labs, this month:**

[A lab refuses the weapons language and gets cut off](https://www.npr.org/2026/02/27/nx-s1-5729118/trump-anthropic-pentagon-openai-ai-weapons-ban)— NPR[SK Telecom, export controls, and who's allowed to touch the models](https://www.wired.com/story/sk-telecom-anthropic-mythos-export-controls/)— Wired[Anthropic is still at odds with the White House over Claude](https://www.wired.com/story/anthropic-is-still-at-odds-with-the-white-house-over-claude-fable-5/)— Wired[Presidential action: Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence](https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2026/06/promoting-advanced-artificial-intelligence-innovation-and-security/)— The White House

**Companies the size of countries:**

**Handing over the governing:**

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## Worth Watching

The videos AI practitioners are passing around right now — curated on [AI TV](https://aiweekly.co/ai-tv).

## This week's poll

If an AI could run your country measurably better than the humans currently do — less corruption, less waste, fewer wars — would you let it?

Last week, 129 of you voted:

Cutting off foreign access to America's best AI models — protection, or own goal?

If an AI could run your country measurably better than the humans currently do — less corruption, less waste, fewer wars — would you let it?

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