Human-machine teams driven by AI are about to reshape warfare. The conventional defense sector, which develops costly weapons at periods of glacial pace, may be threatened by the entry of inventive commercial software developers into the arms market, according to several experts in the field of technology.
The future of large, human-crewed weapons like submarines and surveillance helicopters is uncertain. Battleships fell out of favor with the advent of air power. However, airborne, terrestrial, and aquatic robots, working in tandem with humans, are set to assume a pivotal role in military operations.
The conflict in Ukraine has already shown signs of bringing about such a shift. Even without substantial artificial intelligence-fueled autonomy, teams of people and robots are altering the battlefield. Military specialists say that using simple, remotely flown drones has substantially enhanced the effectiveness of artillery, rockets, and missiles in Ukraine.
At a seminar on military technology on August 28 in Washington, U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks said that conventional military weapons “remain essential.” Nonetheless, she pointed out that the situation in Ukraine has shown that new technologies produced by commercial and non-traditional firms might be “decisive in defending against modern military aggression.”
The potential for automation driven by artificial intelligence to transform weaponry, conflict, and military power is the subject of a Reuters special investigation released today.
According to a study from an apolitical U.S. team of experts, the Special Competitive Studies Project, published in May, Russian and Ukrainian forces are integrating conventional weaponry with AI, satellite imagery and communications, and smart and loitering bombs. Deep trenches and bunkers have sprung up all across the battlefield, with soldiers “forced to go underground or huddle in cellars to survive,” according to the article.
Some military planners have observed that attack and transport helicopters have grown so vulnerable in this fight that they have essentially been pushed from the air, with their functions being progressively given to drones.
“Uncrewed aerial systems have already taken crewed reconnaissance helicopters out of a lot of their missions,” said Mick Ryan, a retired Australian army major general who writes frequent assessments on the fight. Drones are gradually replacing human artillery spotters on the ground. Thus, we are beginning to see replacement.