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The Bitter Struggle (Superintelligence, Superpowers, and the Fate of the World)
List Price:
$33.00
| Expected release date is Nov 10th 2026 |
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Product Details
Author:
Ben Buchanan, Tantum Collins
Format:
Hardcover
Pages:
320
Publisher:
Crown (November 10, 2026)
Imprint:
Crown
Release Date:
November 10, 2026
Language:
English
Audience:
General/trade
ISBN-13:
9798217089482
Weight:
18.45oz
Dimensions:
6.125" x 9.25" x 0.8125"
File:
RandomHouse-PRH_Book_Company_PRH_PRT_Onix_delta_active_D20260625T000856_156721099-20260625.xml
Folder:
RandomHouse
List Price:
$33.00
Country of Origin:
United States
Pub Discount:
65
Case Pack:
12
As low as:
$25.41
Publisher Identifier:
P-RH
Discount Code:
A
QuickShip:
Yes
Overview
From two former White House officials who shaped America’s AI strategy and now work with leading AI companies, an urgent case for why democracies must achieve preeminence in AI—and a bracing warning about what victory will require.
Humanity may soon create AI systems that outperform humans at virtually every cognitive task. Whoever wields that technology will gain a power unlike any in history. In The Bitter Struggle, Ben Buchanan, the first White House Special Advisor for Artificial Intelligence and currently an advisor to Anthropic, and Tantum Collins, who served on the National Security Council after five years at Google DeepMind, argue that the United States and its democratic allies must not lose this contest. But how democracies win matters most of all.
Buchanan and Collins take readers into the briefing rooms where AI CEOs privately warned about their own creations, into the Situation Room where Cabinet Secretaries debated how to choke off China’s access to AI technology, and into the Oval Office, where they helped shape President Biden's decisions. From semiconductor factories in Taiwan to city-sized data centers in America, they show why a million chips may matter more than a million troops, why AI progress has been so stunning and yet so predictable, and why the next few years may decide the next few decades. Yet inventing more powerful AI is only the beginning. Democracies must also deploy AI’s capabilities without surrendering their own values—and so far, they are failing.
The deepest challenge is not the contest with autocracy but the conflict AI will force within democracies themselves. Every choice pits security against liberty, speed against caution, power against principle. This is the bitter struggle. Democracies have every advantage they need to prevail—except, perhaps, the conviction to act.
Humanity may soon create AI systems that outperform humans at virtually every cognitive task. Whoever wields that technology will gain a power unlike any in history. In The Bitter Struggle, Ben Buchanan, the first White House Special Advisor for Artificial Intelligence and currently an advisor to Anthropic, and Tantum Collins, who served on the National Security Council after five years at Google DeepMind, argue that the United States and its democratic allies must not lose this contest. But how democracies win matters most of all.
Buchanan and Collins take readers into the briefing rooms where AI CEOs privately warned about their own creations, into the Situation Room where Cabinet Secretaries debated how to choke off China’s access to AI technology, and into the Oval Office, where they helped shape President Biden's decisions. From semiconductor factories in Taiwan to city-sized data centers in America, they show why a million chips may matter more than a million troops, why AI progress has been so stunning and yet so predictable, and why the next few years may decide the next few decades. Yet inventing more powerful AI is only the beginning. Democracies must also deploy AI’s capabilities without surrendering their own values—and so far, they are failing.
The deepest challenge is not the contest with autocracy but the conflict AI will force within democracies themselves. Every choice pits security against liberty, speed against caution, power against principle. This is the bitter struggle. Democracies have every advantage they need to prevail—except, perhaps, the conviction to act.









