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| Image prepared using Gemini |
How does one balance the imperatives of economic/social development with the critical element of national security? How does one attempt that balance within a political neural network which is driven by markets (the autonomous and free mimetic iterative actions of consumers and producers within a platform of exchange grounded in the expectations of that very iterative mimetics)? How does one balance the essential need for structural coupling within and among trade, politics, culture, and social sub-systems-- how does one balance the essential element of cross-system irritation--with the need to protect the solidity and integrity of collectives producing and consuming irritation?
Those are the fundamental questions that now confront apex states as they attempt to re-imagine themselves by putting together whatever remains of the building blocks the post-1945 project of global convergence which they destroyed and from out of which they seek to elaborate virtual sub-systems masquerading as empire--empire the constitution and defense of which can be undertaken bloodlessly within the simulacra that is the virtual manifestation of the physical order from out of which all of this emerged in the last decade.
Tragic in so many ways. . .
But perhaps inevitable as well, in the ancient Greek sense of tragedy anyway --at least for those who understand the repeating sequential patterns of human collective neural networking. Today one witnesses the quite extraordinary marriage of Nietzsche and Abd al-Rahman ibn Khaldun. The former reminding one of the constitutive realities that come from investing truth and fact with the values, bias and perceptions that produce human cognitive cages constructed from out of belief in the truth of things, and with it their reality; the later reminding one of the recursivity of human collectives, of their assabiyah (عصبيّة) from which one might realize lebenswelt (Husserl) or habitus (Bourdieu) or imaginaries (Sartre) as the lived simulacra of the human collective (in physical form) and its increasingly managerial force in the form of generative digitized realities of those physical manifestations of imagined collective solidarity. Humans project themselves into their simulated selves, into generative sentience made in their own image- - -and then recoil in the horror if it, even as they are tempted to invest even more of themselves in the project of virtual recreation and in the construction of the relationships between themselves physical and virtual, as each projects themselves against and within the other.
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| Pix credit here (note that the output is "dog" because the neural pathways make that choice inevitable; other pathways might have concluded that the image was "food", or "not the property of the state" etc. (on its phenomenology here; on categoriuzation and its framing see Emporio celestial de conocimientos benévolos) |
All of this by way of introduction to a most remarkable document that serves to evidence the way the United States approaches the problem of balance while staying true to the core driving premises (the bars of the cage of its own cognitive frameworks) producing through the application of the processes of its own collective political neural networks an inevitable approach to the balancing of innovation and national security within a markets driven reality aligned with a political system fundamentally distrustful of the State (despite what might be conceived, in retrospect, as the techno-bureaucratic state managed aberrations of the period 1919-2015, or winch might themselves be cast as the current aberrations from the techno-state evolution that ascended or supplanted the national structures of the American political neural networks after 1919). That remarkable document--and the process of its finalization, was President Trump's Executive Order: Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security (2 June 2026). What makes it remarkable is not its terms, as such, but the way in which it exposed the conceptual framework within which such a document was inevitable within a broader framework that had, in the prior Administration of President Biden, produced a different result within the same conceptual cage: Executive Order 14110 of October 30, 2023, Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence. It is one in which national security (AI must be "safe and secure"; "addressing AI systems' most pressing security risks—including with respect to biotechnology, cybersecurity, critical infrastructure, and other national security dangers—while navigating AI's opacity and complexity") is balanced in a different way against other values (privacy, equity and civil rights, enhancing labor rights, etc.), but which also includes protection of market forces ("Federal Government will promote a fair, open, and competitive ecosystem and marketplace for AI and related technologies so that small developers and entrepreneurs can continue to drive innovation"). But see the Biden Administration's 2024 National Security Memorandum (NSM-25) which is discussed in a separate post.
As reported widely (I used the reporting in Politico). That reporting nicely highlighted the structural elements of decision making processes. These were grounded (quite unconsciously of course, because that is how being inside a cognitive cage works) in the protection of the core elements of American cognitive political structures--markets, distrust of the State, and the relentless drive that is innovation (as that in turn might be understand flexibly over time and among sectors of human collective production and consumption of whatever might be of interest from a regulatory perspective) balanced against the fundamental need to protect the markets and its political collective as the primary obligation of the State.
The original version of what became Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security was to have been signed at a White House event on 21 May 2026. That event, and the signing of that version was postponed at the last minute.
Thursday’s abrupt postponement of President Donald Trump’s much-awaited executive order on artificial intelligence came after former AI czar David Sacks voiced industry concerns about the measure to Trump, according to a senior White House official and two people familiar with the matter. * * * The executive order, which the White House planned to release Thursday afternoon, would have set in motion a voluntary oversight system in which developers of advanced AI models could submit their products to a review by federal agencies before releasing them, POLITICO previously reported.* * * According to the White House official, Sacks had participated in a review of the EO this week, and White House officials believed he was generally happy with it and would support it. But Wednesday night, he began to raise concerns, including fears that the voluntary nature of the agreement may one day become mandatory, the senior White House official said. “Then, he called POTUS this morning unbeknownst to anybody, his own staff included, and derailed it,” the White House official said. The reversal also came after industry officials raised concerns about a proposed voluntary review process for cutting-edge “frontier” AI models, according to four people familiar with the matter, who were granted anonymity to discuss private discussions. (Politico).
The question, then, wasn't whether the draft Executive Order (dated May 2026) ought to outline an "America First" AI strategy (eg, discussed here) designed to accelerate technological growth by reducing regulatory burdens while aggressively hardening national security infrastructure against AI-driven threats, but how that balance was to be struck consistent with the interpretation of those values by those producing, managing and developing both products and the national security structures that protected their freedom in and as markets. within the value systems. The policy rejected mandatory federal licensing or preclearance, though the spectre of both remains very much in the air. The alternative--voluntary public-private partnerships, rapid deployment of defensive AI tools across government agencies, and targeted criminal enforcement against malicious actors--one grounded in the vitality of private sector standards and deep interpenetration between the market and the national security apparatus on an operational level, better reflected current consensus on the legitimacy of American regulatory approaches. To do that the Executive Order protects innovation in markets, but ties that innovation to the consequences of such innovation for and as critical elements of American national security.
As finalized, the Executive Order retained most of its original provisions. But it did shorten the period for examination from 90 to 30 days and included the Department of Commerce (Section 3) as a consulting partner.
What result? Here is a short summary:
Section 1: Purpose and Core Policy: The EO starts by reaffirming the operational premise that principle American leadership in AI stems from private-sector talent and a deliberate avoidance of bureaucratic constraints. The administration contrasts its approach with the prior administration, stating that it has actively slashed regulatory hurdles to accelerate AI adoption across both government and industry.
It is the policy of the United States to promote AI innovation and security by working collaboratively with the private sector to modernize government and private sector information systems and harden them against external threats; to protect American ingenuity and intellectual property from exploitation and theft by adversaries; and to cultivate America’s advanced AI-enabled capabilities.
The core policy balances two competing pillars: AI Innovation: Championing an "America First" technological framework that fosters private-sector investment and rapid deployment. National Security: Addressing external threats by modernizing public and private information systems, protecting intellectual property from foreign adversaries, and cultivating advanced defensive capabilities ("Advanced AI capabilities make our Nation stronger, but also introduce new national security considerations that require coordinated action across executive departments and agencies (agencies), and components.").
Section 2: Upgrading American Systems for Advanced AI: This section mandates immediate actions to upgrade cyber defenses across federal and civilian networks, leveraging advanced AI tools to counter incoming threats (Section 2(a). The specifics are set out in Sections 2(b)-(f). They oinclude:
(1) Within 30 days, specific actions are assigned to key agencies: National Security & War Systems: The Committee on National Security Systems and the Secretary of War must prioritize and expedite the cyber defense of their respective information networks.
(2) Civilian Government & Critical Infrastructure: Within 30 days the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), via the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and in consultation with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), must issue Binding Operational Directives. These directives will expedite civilian federal cyber defense, expand AI-driven defensive programs, and facilitate access to cybersecurity tools (including "covered frontier models") for local entities like rural hospitals, community banks, and local utilities.
(3) AI Cybersecurity Clearinghouse: The Department of the Treasury, the National Security Agency (NSA), and CISA will form a clearinghouse in voluntary collaboration with private industry. This entity will scan for, validate, patch, and remediate software vulnerabilities.
(4) Funding and Talent (30 & 60 Days): OMB must immediately evaluate federal grant programs to redirect available funds toward advanced AI vulnerability detection. Within 60 days, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) must expand hiring and placement pathways for the U.S. Tech Force Information Cybersecurity Specialist program to bring technical talent into government.
Section 3: Secure Frontier Model Deployment: This is a section that sets out the public-private framework for AI development within the architecture of national security. Within 60 days, a multi-agency coalition led by Treasury, the NSA, CISA, the National Cyber Director, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) must establish protocols for governing highly advanced AI models.
Classified Benchmarking Process: Section 3(a) describes the creation of a classified process to evaluate the cyber capabilities of AI systems under NSA leadership,which is to determine the exact technical thresholds that designate a system as a "covered frontier model." These benchmarks will be shared with researchers and developers.
Voluntary Government-Industry Framework: The order designs a voluntary program allowing AI developers to: (1) "engage the Federal Government" to determine if their models meet the "covered frontier" designation; (2) provide the federal government with early access to these models for up to 30 days prior to a wider release (under strict confidentiality and intellectual property protections); (3) jointly select "trusted partners" to receive early access to the models to reinforce critical infrastructure defenses.
Anti-Regulation Guardrail: Section 3(c) provides that nothing in this section permits the creation of mandatory government licensing, permitting, or preclearance requirements for developing or distributing AI models.
Section 4: Protection Against Criminal Actors: The Attorney General is directed to prioritize federal criminal enforcement against malicious actors leveraging AI. Specifically, the Department of Justice will target individuals utilizing AI to unlawfully access, breach, or damage public or private information technology systems, or deploying autonomous AI agents to steal data for criminal purposes.
Section 5: General Provisions: the Department of War will bear the costs of publishing the order.
Key Operational Matrix
The following table summarizes the explicit mandates, responsible agencies, and strict deadlines imposed by the draft order:
|
Timeline
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Responsible Agency / Official
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Mandated Action
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Target Systems / Sectors
|
|
30 Days
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Committee on
National Security Systems
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Prioritize and
expedite cyber defense protocols.
|
National Security
Systems
|
|
30 Days
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Secretary of War
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Expedite
information system cyber defenses.
|
Department of War
Systems
|
|
30 Days
|
DHS (CISA) / OMB /
National Cyber Director
|
Release Binding
Operational Directives; deploy AI defensive tools.
|
Civilian Federal
Gov / Critical Infrastructure (Rural hospitals, community banks)
|
|
30 Days
|
Treasury / NSA /
CISA
|
Establish a
voluntary AI Cybersecurity Clearinghouse.
|
Software
vulnerability scanning and patch distribution
|
|
30 Days
|
OMB / CISA /
National Cyber Director
|
Identify and
divert federal grant funds.
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Advanced AI
vulnerability detection development
|
|
60 Days
|
Office of
Personnel Management (OPM)
|
Expand specialist
hiring and placement pathways.
|
U.S. Tech Force
Information Cybersecurity
|
|
60 Days
|
NSA / Treasury /
CISA / NIST / National Cyber Director
|
1. Establish
classified benchmarking metrics.
2. Build a
voluntary 30-day early-access framework.
|
"Covered
Frontier Models"
|
|
Ongoing
|
Attorney General /
DOJ
|
Prioritize
criminal prosecution of AI-driven cybercrimes.
|
Unauthorized
computer access, malicious AI agents
|
None of this affects sanctions regimes, nor export restrictions regimes and must be understood as deeply embedded in the current government programs to manage exports with national security implications. What it does do is provide an additional structural pillar in the reconstitution of economic policy, and development, of key industrial sectors, as national security in line with the fundamentals of the Trump Administration's America First policy (see The Conceptual Architecture of America First—Ideological Transactionalism and the Case of Cuba).
And none of this touches on the deep, intricate and informal networks of engagement between public and private in the context of frontier (and more "ordinary") tech based innovation. The deep intertwining of the State apparatus and the market for products, innovation, expectation, and processes that the apparatus consumes (and protects) suggests that actions like this Executive Order are important, but also serve to shield those interconnections that sometimes make it hard to distinguish either a public or private sphere, or in this case the larger private producers and the State as consumer of innovation. In that respect the now long process of the interconnection between institutional actors in markets continues to develop (or evolve) in ways that suggest that the private-public divide will assume new and not yet visible characteristics in the future.
The primary source documents follow: (1) Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security; (2) Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Promotes Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security; and the (3) the Draft Executive Order (May 2026), along with President Biden's 2023 Executive Order 14110 (30 October 30); Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence.