Saudi and Kuwaiti AI Bureaucracies Sign Papers, Declare the Future Now Under Control

In a move that sounds more futuristic than functionally groundbreaking, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have signed an agreement that promises to shape how artificial intelligence behaves in the Gulf—assuming, of course, AI ever learns to obey.
The memorandum of understanding was inked between Saudi Arabia’s Artificial Intelligence Governance Association (AIGA) and Kuwait’s Association of Artificial Intelligence of Things (AAIOT), two organizations with very long names and very high hopes.
Both parties are aiming to advance cooperation on AI governance standards, encourage regional knowledge-sharing, and support scientific research in the rapidly expanding field of AIoT, or Artificial Intelligence of Things—a buzzword that fuses machine learning with connected devices and, occasionally, actual real-world applications.
Dhabia bint Ahmed Al-Buainain, chairwoman of AIGA, described the deal in a post on X as the birth of “a shared vision to enhance regional cooperation in artificial intelligence and its governance.” She added that this strategic partnership will help shape responsible and innovative AI policies across Gulf states. Whether the AI itself has been consulted remains unclear.
The agreement, which marks AIGA’s first international collaboration, reflects the Saudi association’s ambition to evolve from a national enforcer of AI ethics into a regional player in the high-stakes game of data-driven decision-making.
Boston Consulting Group’s April 2025 report paints a picture of the Gulf as a region that talks big and invests even bigger when it comes to AI. While Saudi Arabia and the UAE are leading the charge with massive infrastructure rollouts, countries like Kuwait and Oman are still playing catch-up through strategic partnerships and diplomatic handshakes.
The BCG study did, however, throw a bit of cold water on the AI hype, noting that while governments are investing heavily, the private sector remains lukewarm. Research output and local talent pipelines are also reportedly underdeveloped—awkward details that may slightly temper the optimism of today’s headlines.
The memorandum was signed with the usual fanfare, attended by senior officials from AIGA, AAIOT, and the Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority (SDAIA), the tech-savvy agency pulling the strings behind much of the Kingdom’s digital transformation efforts.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Ahmed Al-Sabah, chair of AAIOT and presumably not a fan of bureaucratic modesty, hailed the deal as a “promising opportunity to exchange experiences and develop joint projects that serve the interests of our communities.” He also stressed that both countries remain committed to advancing AI under “the highest ethical and organizational standards”—because, of course, no one wants to be the country that accidentally trains a rogue toaster.
Both associations have emphasized that the deal will contribute to building knowledge-based economies fueled by emerging technologies, rather than, say, oil or elaborate marketing.
AIGA’s own statement underscored the symbolic importance of the agreement, calling it “particularly significant” as its first international memorandum. That framing could be interpreted as ambition—or just relief that someone outside Saudi Arabia answered their email.
At its core, the partnership is designed to encourage joint initiatives in AI governance, foster innovation in AIoT, and—most importantly—create enough committees, frameworks, and advisory panels to ensure AI won’t do anything too clever without a permit.
While critics might argue that these AI agreements are more about optics than algorithms, the underlying trend is clear: Gulf nations want to be taken seriously as global players in tech governance.
Whether this is the dawn of truly responsible AI or just another chapter in regional bureaucracy remains to be seen.
But for now, at least, the future has a logo and a five-year strategy plan.
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