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Mythos, power, and the state of artificial intelligence

4 min read
2027-05-31
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Thomas Mucha, Geopolitical Strategist
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In April 2026, AI safety and research company Anthropic revealed Mythos, one of its latest models, developed as part of its wider AI system, Claude. At a practical level, Mythos is designed to discover, reason through, and operationalize software vulnerability and resilience autonomously, at a scale and depth that far exceeds human led or rules based systems.

What makes Mythos different from other AI models is its ability to explore unfamiliar problems and generate novel attack and defense pathways. This suggests obvious applications across cyber operations, critical infrastructure protection, intelligence analysis, and other high risk domains.

However, the most important thing to understand about Mythos isn't what it can do, but what its existence signals. From my perspective, Mythos isn't just a powerful new model, or even a leap forward in cybersecurity tooling. It's a marker — a bright line — indicating that AI has evolved from being primarily an economic technology into, above all else, a national security instrument.

The current administration may also view Mythos’s debut as something of an inflection point. The president is reportedly considering implementing government oversight in AI, which would represent a dramatic reversal from his laissez-faire approach to the technology companies developing AI models.

AI as national security infrastructure

For much of the past decade, AI policy debates focused on ethics, bias, alignment, and safety. And, of course, at the macro level, considerations around productivity, wage impacts, industry structure implications, and the like.

These are necessary conversations, but they’re incomplete. Mythos demonstrates why: Once AI systems begin autonomously discovering and operationalizing resilience at scale, they stop being tools that assist national power and instead become components of it.

This is why I think AI increasingly resembles strategic infrastructure rather than software. Like satellite constellations, undersea cables, logistics hubs, or intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) networks, its national security value lies in scale, continuity, and control.

The leverage shift: Frontier labs and the state

The second critical implication of Mythos is institutional rather than technical. Frontier AI labs now possess capabilities that governments can't easily replicate, evaluate, or even fully understand in real time.

Regulation has traditionally assumed that governments lag slightly behind innovation but can eventually catch up. This assumption no longer holds. The pace at which frontier models evolve compresses development cycles far beyond legislative, regulatory, and bureaucratic response times. We're now entering a world where the limiting factor is no longer innovation, but governance — and, so far, governance is losing the race.

The relationship between governments and frontier labs is inverting. States increasingly need these companies more than the companies need states — not for revenue, but for strategic capacity. Mythos likely accelerates this shift, too. Broadly speaking, the AI labs — not at government agencies — may decide how companies will do critical business functions when using AI, and not necessarily the government decisions. This creates a new political economy of AI governance. Labs gain leverage not by lobbying against regulation, but by making themselves indispensable. Governments, in turn, shift from trying to police AI to trying to ensure preferred access to it. This is a quiet but profound change.

This tension sits at the core of my national security argument: AI is no longer simply governed by the state; it's increasingly negotiated with, even as it becomes one of the central tools of state power itself.

Geopolitical implications

My core geopolitical message remains that US-China competition is the central organizing dynamic of the global system. AI has long been an arena of strategic US-China competition, but frontier level models like Mythos raise the stakes of the rivalry. This space has been elevated from an abstract race for technological leadership into a concrete contest over national security advantage.

As a result, Washington and Beijing will likely intensify efforts to shield critical AI related sectors from external dependence, while simultaneously pouring resources into domestic capability building.

This pressure will likely extend beyond models themselves to the range of inputs required to train and deploy next generation AI: advanced semiconductors, rare earths and specialty materials, power generation and grid reliability, and the physical and digital infrastructure that supports large scale computing power. Reducing vulnerability in these areas will increasingly be seen not as industrial policy, but as a core national security objective.

Investment implications

From an investment perspective, the "Mythos moment" reinforces the need for open-mindedness and cross-disciplinary synthesis when it comes to AI ― not binary views. AI’s effects will reverberate across sectors and asset classes rather than concentrating in a narrow set of beneficiaries. And once AI systems cross key capability thresholds, job displacement, repricing, and competitive restructuring can happen quickly.

Several key investment themes stand out to me here:

  • Infrastructure remains foundational. Intelligence itself may become cheap, but the ability to generate, scale, and deploy it is constrained by physical realities. Semiconductors, networking equipment, data centers, power generation, cooling, and grid capacity remain bottlenecks, and demand continues to outpace supply across much of the stack.
  • Software isn't dead — but it’s being repriced. The software outlook is more complicated than it’s ever been, as investors reassess terminal value, competitive moats, and margin durability in the face of rapidly advancing AI models. The likely winners will be firms that use AI to accelerate revenue and expand margins simultaneously, rather than treating AI as a defensive talking point or a blunt cost cutting tool.
  • Second order effects matter at least as much as first order adoption. AI adoption is shaped not just by technical capability, but by governance, compliance, workforce adjustment, and public sentiment. Pushback related to job displacement, data center expansion, or high risk AI use cases can slow deployment, even as underlying capabilities continue to advance.
  • Sustained AI competition at the geopolitical level will drive even more investment across national security themes. This is critical for my broader geopolitical framework and suggests a massive structural investment opportunity.

As AI becomes embedded in intelligence gathering, ISR, cyber operations, space systems, and weapons development, competition among major powers will reinforce demand for traditional defense spending and defense innovation. This includes:
software defined military systems; space and satellite infrastructure; cyber resilience; autonomous technologies; logistics; energy security; and the industrial base required to support them.

In short, I don't believe AI should be thought of as a bubble, or as a predetermined economic destiny. Rather, it's likely an enduring, uneven force reshaping markets alongside a rapidly shifting, increasingly fragmented geopolitical backdrop ― and a disruptor that will continue to create differentiated opportunities in the investment landscape.

The views expressed are those of the author at the time of writing. Other teams may hold different views and make different investment decisions. The value of your investment may become worth more or less than at the time of original investment. While any third-party data used is considered reliable, its accuracy is not guaranteed. For professional, institutional or accredited investors only.

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