The United States and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have many ties, investments, and plans to advance technologies, particularly in the growth of artificial intelligence (AI). This partnership highlights the UAE’s commitment to becoming a global powerhouse for next-generation technologies.
Though we know many big USA tech giants announced big investments in UAE for AI growth.
Renowned global trends analyst Afshin Molavi said, “The UAE is right there with the US when we talk big on high-tech, artificial intelligence in particular.”
The UAE, a small Gulf country, has effectively shown its strong commitment to knowledge-sharing and provided a space for the development of AI, thereby attracting many global investments and ideas for AI development in the UAE. It also established ties with Western allies in the technology world, establishing a stronghold in advanced technology areas.
Artificial intelligence represents one of the strongest links between the UAE and the USA.
This cooperation between the UAE and the US includes security, trade relations and cultural connectivity. It is based on the mutual benefits of closer cooperation in these areas.
As U.S. President Joe Biden prepares for his visit to the Middle East, there’s a broader narrative emerging beyond the traditional focus on oil. In a recent column for Syndication Bureau, Afshin Molavi explores this shift towards connectivity as a key driver for the region’s future.
Molavi illustrates this transition, stating, “On the very day that US President Joe Biden lands in Saudi Arabia this month, nearly 200,000 containers will be making their way to ports from Tangier to Dubai, hundreds of thousands of airline passengers will transit through the region’s airports, millions of dollars in remittances will be flowing from the region to the developing world, and countless American companies will be selling their wares to a growing Arab middle class.”
Molavi emphasizes that the traditional Western focus on the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region’s oil and gas sector is becoming outdated. “Oil and gas, once the main draws for the West, will almost be an afterthought. In other words, it will be just another day of business in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA).”
“For too long, the United States’ regional policy has focused almost entirely on the triumvirate of security, geopolitics, and oil. It’s time for the US – and the broader Western world – to widen its scope and see the MENA region for what it is, and not a caricature of what it was in the 1970s.”
So, this shift of relations between the United States and the United Arab Emirates from oil to technology and AI is something to note for the MENA region, the UAE always welcomes knowledge sharing, so it is definitely an important part of global relations and those Will benefit countries that have the least technological development such as Africa.
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