Article XV: Withdrawal and Duration
- The Treaty shall be of unlimited duration.
- Each Party shall in exercising its national sovereignty have the right to withdraw from the Treaty if it decides that extraordinary events, related to the subject matter of this Treaty, have jeopardized the supreme interests of its country. It shall give notice of such withdrawal to the ISIA 12 months in advance.
- During this 12 month period, the withdrawing state shall cooperate with ISIA efforts to certify that after withdrawal, the withdrawing state will be unable to develop, train, post-train, or deploy dangerous AI systems, including ASI or systems above the Treaty thresholds. Withdrawing states acknowledge that such cooperation aids the ISIA and Parties in avoiding the use of Article XII.
- In particular, the withdrawing state, under ISIA oversight, will remove all covered chip clusters and ASI-enabling assets (e.g., advanced computer chip manufacturing equipment) from its territory to ISIA-approved control or render them permanently inoperable (as described in Article V).
- Nothing in this Article limits the applicability of Article XII. A State that has withdrawn (and is therefore a non-Party) remains subject to Protective Actions if credible evidence indicates activities aimed at ASI development or deployment.
* Sometimes they are superseded by other treaties. This was the case for the 1947 General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT); it was superseded by the 1994 Marrakesh agreement, which incorporated the rules from GATT but established the World Trade Organization (WTO) to replace GATT’s institutional structure. Treaties of unlimited duration also sometimes end when parties withdraw in a manner that makes the treaty ineffective. For example, the U.S. and USSR initially agreed to the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty for an unlimited duration, but the U.S. withdrew in 2019 citing Russian non-compliance, and Russia later announced it would no longer abide by the treaty in 2025.