Intelligence agencies from the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand warned in a rare joint statement that AI models capable of disabling governments and businesses could emerge within months. The alliance urged global leaders to take immediate action.
The Five Eyes intelligence partnership—comprising signal agencies from five English-speaking nations—issued an unprecedented public warning about the rapid advancement of frontier AI systems.
According to the statement, these next-generation AI models pose significant risks to critical infrastructure and could be weaponized for large-scale cyberattacks. The agencies emphasized that the timeline for such threats is measured in months rather than years.
The joint statement represents a notable departure from typical intelligence agency protocol, which generally operates behind closed doors. The decision to speak publicly underscores the perceived urgency of the threat.
The warning comes amid broader tensions over AI regulation and national security. The Trump administration recently blocked foreign nationals from accessing Anthropic's Fable AI model, signaling heightened concerns about AI technology falling into unfriendly hands.
The Five Eyes agencies called on world leaders and technology companies to "act now" to establish safeguards and governance frameworks. The statement suggests that current regulatory approaches may be insufficient to address the speed of AI development.
The alliance did not specify which AI systems pose the greatest risk, but the focus on "frontier" models—the most advanced systems under development—indicates concern about cutting-edge AI capabilities beyond current publicly available tools.
Experts have long warned that advanced AI systems could be exploited for sophisticated cyberattacks, disinformation campaigns, and other malicious purposes. The Five Eyes statement suggests intelligence agencies now view these scenarios as near-term threats rather than distant possibilities.
The warning follows growing international concern about AI safety and control. Governments worldwide are grappling with how to regulate AI development while maintaining technological competitiveness.
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