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China’s Military AI Wish List | Center for Security and Emerging Technology

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Credibility Rating

4/5
High(4)

High quality. Established institution or organization with editorial oversight and accountability.

Rating inherited from publication venue: CSET Georgetown

Published by Georgetown's Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET), this resource is relevant for understanding geopolitical dimensions of AI development, particularly how military AI competition between major powers shapes the broader AI safety and governance landscape.

Metadata

Importance: 52/100organizational reportanalysis

Summary

This CSET analysis examines China's military priorities and aspirations for artificial intelligence development, drawing on Chinese-language sources to identify key capability areas the People's Liberation Army seeks to develop. It provides insight into how China's military conceptualizes AI applications for defense and national security purposes.

Key Points

  • Identifies specific AI capability areas prioritized by China's military, including autonomous systems, intelligence analysis, and command decision-making support
  • Draws on Chinese-language military and government documents to surface stated PLA AI development goals
  • Highlights the gap between China's AI aspirations and current technical capabilities in the military domain
  • Provides context for understanding China's broader military modernization strategy and its AI component
  • Relevant for understanding US-China strategic competition in AI and implications for global AI governance

1 FactBase fact citing this source

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China’s Military AI Wish List | Center for Security and Emerging Technology 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 

 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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 Reports 

 China’s Military AI Wish List

 Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Cyber, Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance, and Targeting (C5ISRT)

 
 
 Emelia Probasco, 

 Sam Bresnick, 

 and Cole McFaul

 
 February 2026 
 
 This report examines thousands of Chinese-language open-source requests for proposal (RFPs) published by the People’s Liberation Army between January 1, 2023, and December 31, 2024. The RFPs the authors reviewed offer insights into the PLA’s priorities and ambitions for AI-enabled military technologies associated with C5ISRT: command, control, communications, computers, cyber, intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, and targeting.

 Download Report 
 
 

 

 
 
 
 
 Takeaways 

 In analyzing these requests for proposal (RFPs), the authors find that the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is pursuing AI-enabled capabilities across all domains. The applications include decision support systems (AI-DSS), sensor enhancement tools, data fusion algorithms, and much more.

 The RFPs reflect China’s desire to generate, augment, and fuse increasing quantities of data to speed military decision-making and improve the precision and efficacy of the PLA’s operations. Specifically, the authors found requests for AI-DSS that can leverage open-source data for strategic decision-making. They also came across requests for AI-DSS to support tactical decisions, such as for targeting. While many militaries are investing in AI-DSS, these systems are of particular importance to the PLA, which views them as a means of compensating for perceived weaknesses in its officer corps.

 More specifically, the authors found an emphasis on AI applications that would counter perceived U.S. military advantages. This emphasis was especially apparent in numerous requests for technologies to detect U.S. naval assets on and under the sea, as well as technologies that could counteract U.S. space-based systems.

 Outside of the maritime and space domains, the PLA’s RFPs reveal it aims to acquire increasingly sophisticated surveillance and cognitive domain capabilities. RFPs for facial and gait recognition systems, digital surveillance tools capable of recovering deleted data, and technologies for generating and detecting deepfakes point to ongoing efforts to better secure military installations and develop AI-enabled psychological warfare and cognitive targeting tools.

 These documents, which are published by the PLA, are strikingly explicit in their requests for sensitive capabilities, including those related to operations in the space, cyber, and cognitive domains. The level of specificity is notable and likely reflects an effort to access advanced capabilities from nontraditional, commercial vendors outside China’s traditi

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