In a move that has sent shockwaves through the international security community, the Trump administration has unilaterally terminated a $1.8 billion fund dedicated to countering the weaponisation of emerging technologies. The decision, announced without prior consultation with allies, effectively cedes strategic ground to hostile state actors who have been aggressively pursuing these capabilities.
Dr. Helena Vance, Science & Climate Correspondent, here with a data-driven analysis of this critical development. The fund, established under the previous administration, was a targeted response to the increasing militarisation of artificial intelligence, cyber weapons, and space-based systems. Its objectives were clear: to develop defensive countermeasures, promote international norms, and support research into verification and transparency mechanisms.
The discontinuation represents a fundamental shift in strategy. The fund's budget represented less than 0.02% of the US defence budget, yet its impact was disproportionately significant. It funded over 40 projects across 12 countries, including early-warning systems for cyber attacks, AI-driven disinformation detection networks, and satellite interference safeguards.
Consider the analogy of a firebreak: in a wildfire, a firebreak is a strategically cleared area that stops a blaze from spreading. This fund was a firebreak against the weaponisation of technology. By abandoning it, the administration has effectively removed that barrier, allowing the flames of destabilisation to spread unchecked.
Data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute shows that global military expenditure on advanced technologies has risen by 18% over the past three years, with the most significant increases from hostile state actors. One key state has invested heavily in directed-energy weapons and autonomous drone swarms, technologies that this fund was specifically designed to counter.
The timing is particularly concerning. We are witnessing a convergence of crises: a pandemic-weakened global economy, growing geopolitical tensions, and rapid technological change. In this context, the abandonment of a relatively modest but strategically vital fund is akin to removing a crucial piece of a dam while floodwaters rise.
Supporters of the decision argue that it frees up resources for immediate threats and reduces government overreach. However, this perspective ignores the long-term nature of technological competition. Unlike conventional weapons, technological seeds planted today can take years or decades to bear fruit. By cutting the fund, we are effectively planting no seeds for tomorrow's security landscape.
The fund also served as a platform for international cooperation. It brought together scientists, engineers, and policy experts from allied nations to share best practices and coordinate responses. This collaborative network is now dismantled, its expertise scattered. Rebuilding such networks takes years, assuming the political will exists.
From a climate perspective, the parallels are stark. Just as delaying action on carbon emissions locks in future warming, delaying action on technological weaponisation locks in future insecurity. The physics of climate change and the dynamics of arms races share a common property: inertia. Once set in motion, they are exceedingly difficult to reverse.
The immediate consequences are already visible. Within hours of the announcement, several allied governments issued statements of concern, and more tellingly, a hostile state actor's military blog celebrated the “strategic victory” and announced accelerated development of counter-space weapons.
This is not a partisan issue. The fund was supported by both Republican and Democratic security experts when it was created. Its termination appears to be driven more by ideological opposition to multilateralism and long-term strategic thinking than by any careful analysis of costs and benefits.
As a scientist, I am trained to follow the data. The data tell a clear story: abandoning this fund increases the risk of a technological arms race, reduces our ability to prevent or respond to catastrophic attacks, and undermines the very alliances that have kept the peace for decades.
We are now in a race against time. The technologies in question are advancing exponentially. Every day without a coordinated, funded response is a day that hostile actors gain advantage. The decision to abandon the anti-weaponisation fund is not just a policy choice. It is a gamble with global security, and the odds are not in our favour.









