Overview
- Pakistan urged that AI development and military use be governed by the UN Charter and international law, calling for a prohibition on applications lacking meaningful human control.
- UN Secretary-General António Guterres renewed his push for a legally binding instrument next year banning lethal autonomous weapons operating without human control, stressing that nuclear decisions must remain with humans.
- Guterres outlined four priorities for international peace and security: human control over the use of force, coherent global regulation, protection of information integrity, and closing the AI capacity gap.
- The General Assembly has established an Independent International Scientific Panel on AI and an annual Global Dialogue on AI Governance, with the Secretary-General preparing an open call for panel nominations.
- Pakistan cited a reported India–Pakistan exchange involving autonomous munitions to underscore risks, while expert Yejin Choi warned of concentrated control of AI and urged more inclusive, linguistically diverse development.