On May 24, ASEAN Secretary-General Kao Kim Hourn inaugurated the new ASEAN-China Artificial Intelligence Industry Innovation Center in Beijing. Billed as a flagship project under the 2026–2030 China-ASEAN Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, the Center is designed to facilitate joint research, industrial deployment, standards-setting and capacity building.
The timing is striking. Autonomous “agentic” AI systems are emerging risks globally, and the Indo-Pacific is no exception. Unlike traditional generative AI that simply creates content on command, agentic AI systems can plan multi-step actions, coordinate with other agents, and execute tasks with minimal human oversight. Southeast Asia’s extreme linguistic fragmentation, social media penetration, and political sensitivities make the region especially fertile ground for agentic disinformation.
Early signs of that risk are already visible. There has been a rapid proliferation of AI-generated videos and commentary in Chinese-language social media targeting Singapore’s political leadership with fabricated claims of instability and economic collapse, for example (to be clear, these recent disinformation campaigns have no connection to the new Center).
The Center thus sharpens a classic Indo-Pacific dilemma. It offers genuine opportunities for technological leapfrogging in manufacturing, smart infrastructure, and digital services. At the same time, deeper integration of Chinese-developed AI tools could accelerate agentic disinformation campaigns if governance cannot keep pace.
Four core pillars define the Center’s work: promoting joint research and industrial-scale AI deployment in manufacturing and smart infrastructure, establishing trade and investment dialogue mechanisms to expand the ecosystem, emphasizing standardisation and shared rule-making, and supporting regional capacity building through smart infrastructure projects across ASEAN member states.
This initiative builds directly on the earlier China-ASEAN Artificial Intelligence Application Cooperation Center established in Nanning in September 2025. It shifts the emphasis toward practical industry rollout and cross-border deployment, in line with the goals of the 2026–2030 Comprehensive Strategic Partnership Action Plan. The Center, therefore, provides ASEAN governments with a pathway to accelerate digital adoption while forging deeper institutional ties with Chinese AI developers.
Yet this very integration also exposes the region to significant governance risks. Existing policy simply can’t keep up. The ASEAN Guide on AI Governance and Ethics, like most domestic laws, handles human-directed systems but offers little guidance on autonomous “swarms,” networks of AI agents operating independently across borders. The Center could indirectly lower barriers to these threats. Joint research, shared data flows, and capacity-building programs could speed the deployment of Chinese-developed agentic tools if regional standards do not keep pace. Consequently, the same technical integration driving economic gains could lower barriers for influence operations that exploit unresolved governance gaps.
Alongside state-led approaches to AI safety and governance, China’s approach emphasizes cyber sovereignty and civilizational AI values that prioritize state control, data security, and social stability. These principles are likely to influence the joint standards and rule-making processes advanced through the new Center.
The resulting governance gaps could create real strategic risks for the region. Agentic disinformation can deepen political polarization, erode public trust in institutions, and complicate crisis management during South China Sea incidents or national elections.
These weaknesses have implications beyond Southeast Asia. Weaker ASEAN governance directly threatens the resilience of Quad and AUKUS technology cooperation initiatives, while gaps in cybersecurity, technical expertise and monitoring create exploitable vulnerabilities.
The new Center, therefore, highlights a clear strategic tension: deeper economic integration with Chinese AI advances brings heightened influence risks that require proactive mitigation if Southeast Asia is to preserve strategic autonomy in the digital domain. Absent such safeguards, path dependence will set in quickly, and technical standards, data pipelines and vendor ecosystems chosen now will become extremely costly to change later. Early governance decisions will play a decisive role in determining whether the Center strengthens regional resilience or tends to lock in long-term vulnerability.
With South China Sea tensions showing little sign of easing and several ASEAN countries facing politically sensitive elections over the coming 18 months, these risks are immediate rather than hypothetical. Agentic systems could, in principle, rapidly generate tailored disinformation in local languages, simulate grassroots opposition, or manufacture consensus around contested maritime claims. Once technical standards, data pipelines, and vendor ecosystems are locked in through the new Center, reversing direction will likely become significantly more difficult.
Ministers at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore from May 29-31 addressed these risks directly. In his keynote address, Vietnam’s President To Lam emphasized that artificial intelligence, autonomous systems, and other emerging technologies have the potential to amplify suspicion, enable information manipulation, compress decision-making timelines, and increase the risk of miscalculation. Japanese Defense Minister Koizumi Shinjiro said that social media and AI can be misused, and people’s decisions can be shaken by disinformation and information manipulation, while Singapore Defense Minister Chan Chun Sing highlighted that AI offers tremendous opportunities to strengthen national security, but no government wants an uncontrollable AI-enabled weapons system.
However, while these high-level speeches demonstrated growing awareness of the risks, the discussions remained general in nature and produced no concrete decisions or follow-up commitments on agentic AI governance. ASEAN and its partners must therefore move beyond awareness and translate these concerns into concrete action by advancing four practical steps: include human-in-the-loop and transparency rules in all new AI cooperation agreements; establish joint monitoring of cross-border agentic activity; update the ASEAN Guide on AI Governance and Ethics by the end of 2026 to explicitly cover autonomous swarms; and launch minilateral initiatives with Australia, Singapore, and Japan on detection tools.
These measures would not slow innovation. They would ensure the economic benefits of the ASEAN-China Center come with safeguards that protect regional stability and strategic autonomy.
The ASEAN-China Artificial Intelligence Industry Innovation Center is in intent neither purely benign nor inherently malign. Its ultimate impact will depend in large part on whether ASEAN and its partners treat governance with the same urgency as the economic opportunity it presents. The region must therefore secure concrete commitments to make Southeast Asia ready for agentic AI, or risk allowing disinformation campaigns to exploit emerging AI capabilities alongside innovation.

