"During the coming year, the United States and its allies will confront a complex and pivotal international
security environment dominated by two critical strategic challenges that intersect with each other and
existing trends to intensify their national security implications. First, great powers, rising regional powers,
as well as an evolving array of non-state actors, will vie for dominance in the global order, as well as
compete to set the emerging conditions and the rules that will shape that order for decades to come.
Strategic competition between the United States and its allies, China, and Russia over what kind of world
will emerge makes the next few years critical to determining who and what will shape the narrative perhaps
most immediately in the context of Russia’s actions in Ukraine, which threaten to escalate into a broader
conflict between Russia and the West. Second, shared global challenges, including climate change, and
human and health security, are converging as the planet emerges from the COVID-19 pandemic and
confronts economic issues spurred by both energy and food insecurity. Rapidly emerging or evolving
technologies continue to have the potential to disrupt traditional business and society with both positive and
negative outcomes, while creating unprecedented vulnerabilities and attack surfaces, making it increasingly
challenging to predict the impact of such challenges on the global landscape.
These two strategic challenges will intersect and interact in unpredictable ways, leading to mutually
reinforcing effects that could challenge our ability to respond, but that also will introduce new opportunities
to forge collective action with allies and partners, including non-state actors. The 2023 Annual Threat
Assessment highlights some of those connections as it provides the IC’s baseline assessments of the most
pressing threats to U.S. national interests. It is not an exhaustive assessment of all global challenges. This
assessment addresses both the threats from U.S. adversaries and functional and transnational concerns, such
as weapons of mass destruction and cyber, primarily in the sections regarding threat actors, as well as an
array of regional issues with larger, global implications..."
Threat Assessment
Thursday, April 13, 2023
Annual Threat Assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Community:2023
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