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The 21st-century pursuit of strategic advantage has shifted from megatonnage to milliseconds, with great powers investing heavily in Artificial Intelligence (AI) to modernize their nuclear command, control, and communications (NC3) systems. The prevailing logic assumes that AI-driven speed and autonomy will enhance deterrence and solidify superpower status. This paper argues that this assumption is a strategic fallacy. Rather than enhancing security, AI integration inverts the logic of nuclear deterrence by creating The Black Box Paradox. It replaces the slow, rational, and mostly stable logic of "Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD)" with a fast, brittle, and opaque system prone to catastrophic failure. This paper deconstructs the fallacy, arguing that AI integration creates Mutual Assured Vulnerability (MAV) by introducing unmanageable risks from hacking, data-poisoning, and black box errors. This new security dilemma traps nations in a 21st-century prisoner's dilemma, where the rational pursuit of individual security leads to collective, assured ruin. The paper concludes that true 21st-century power is not defined by a zero-sum arms race but by positive-sum cooperation, geoeconomic resilience, and a collective exit from this self-defeating logic.
Sakubu Donatien (Sun,) studied this question.