EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
The Age of the Killer Robot is No Longer a Sci-Fi Fantasy
You can't appeal to robots for mercy or empathy - or punish them afterwards
In the dark, in the silence, in a blink, the age
of the autonomous killer robot has arrived. It is happening. They are
deployed. And - at their current rate of acceleration - they will
become the dominant method of war for rich countries in the 21st
century. These facts sound, at first, preposterous. The idea of
machines that are designed to whirr out into the world and make their
own decisions to kill is an old sci-fi fantasy: picture a mechanical
Arnold Schwarzenegger blasting a truck and muttering: "Hasta la vista,
baby." But we live in a world of such whooshing technological
transformation that the concept has leaped in just five years from the
cinema screen to the battlefield - with barely anyone back home
noticing. 
When the US invaded Iraq in 2003, they had no robots as part of their force. By the end of 2005, they had 2,400. Today, they have 12,000, carrying out 33,000 missions a year. A report by the US Joint Forces Command says autonomous robots will be the norm on the battlefield within 20 years.
The Nato forces now depend on a range of killer robots, largely designed by the British Ministry of Defence labs privatised by Tony Blair in 2001. Every time you hear about a "drone attack" against Afghanistan or Pakistan, that's an unmanned robot dropping bombs on human beings. Push a button and it flies away, kills, and comes home. Its robot-cousin on the battlefields below is called SWORDS: a human-sized robot that can see 360 degrees around it and fire its machine-guns at any target it "chooses". Fox News proudly calls it "the GI of the 21st century." And billions are being spent on the next generation of warbots, which will leave these models looking like the bulky box on which you used to play Pong.
At the moment, most are controlled by a soldier - often 7,500 miles away - with a control panel. But insurgents are always inventing new ways to block the signal from the control centre, which causes the robot to shut down and "die". So the military is building "autonomy" into the robots: if they lose contact, they start to make their own decisions, in line with a pre-determined code.
This is "one of the most fundamental changes in the history of human warfare," according to PW Singer, a former analyst for the Pentagon and the CIA, in his must-read book, Wired For War: The Robotics Revolution and Defence in the Twenty-First Century. Humans have been developing weapons that enabled us to kill at ever-greater distances and in ever-greater numbers for millennia, from the longbow to the cannon to the machine-gun to the nuclear bomb. But these robots mark a different stage.
The earlier technologies made it possible for humans to decide to kill in more "sophisticated" ways - but once you programme and unleash an autonomous robot, the war isn't fought by you any more: it's fought by the machine. The subject of warfare shifts.
The military claim this is a safer model of combat. Gordon Johnson of the Pentagon's Joint Forces Command says of the warbots: "They're not afraid. They don't forget their orders. They don't care if the guy next to them has been shot. Will they do a better job than humans? Yes." Why take a risk with your soldier's life, if he can stay in Arlington and kill in Kandahar? Think of it as War 4.0.
But the evidence punctures this techno-optimism. We know the programming of robots will regularly go wrong - because all technological programming regularly goes wrong. Look at the place where robots are used most frequently today: factories. Some 4 per cent of US factories have "major robotics accidents" every year - a man having molten aluminium poured over him, or a woman picked up and placed on a conveyor belt to be smashed into the shape of a car. The former Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi was nearly killed a few years ago after a robot attacked him on a tour of a factory. And remember: these are robots that aren't designed to kill.
Think about how maddening it is to deal with a robot on the telephone when you want to pay your phone bill. Now imagine that robot had a machine-gun pointed at your chest.
Robots find it almost impossible to distinguish an apple from a tomato: how will they distinguish a combatant from a civilian? You can't appeal to a robot for mercy; you can't activate its empathy. And afterwards, who do you punish? Marc Garlasco, of Human Rights Watch, says: "War crimes need a violation and an intent. A machine has no capacity to want to kill civilians.... If they are incapable of intent, are they incapable of war crimes?"
Robots do make war much easier - for the aggressor. You are taking much less physical risk with your people, even as you kill more of theirs. One US report recently claimed they will turn war into "an essentially frictionless engineering exercise". As Larry Korb, Ronald Reagan's assistant secretary of defence, put it: "It will make people think, 'Gee, warfare is easy.'"
If virtually no American forces had died in Vietnam, would the war have stopped when it did - or would the systematic slaughter of the Vietnamese people have continued for many more years? If "we" weren't losing anyone in Afghanistan or Iraq, would the call for an end to the killing be as loud? I'd like to think we are motivated primarily by compassion for civilians on the other side, but I doubt it. Take "us" safely out of the picture and we will be more willing to kill "them".
There is some evidence that warbots will also make us less inhibited in our killing. When another human being is standing in front of you, when you can stare into their eyes, it's hard to kill them. When they are half the world away and little more than an avatar, it's easy. A young air force lieutenant who fought through a warbot told Singer: "It's like a video game [with] the ability to kill. It's like ... freaking cool."
When the US First Marine Expeditionary Force in Iraq was asked in 2006 what kind of robotic support it needed, they said they had an "urgent operational need" for a laser mounted on to an unmanned drone that could cause "instantaneous burst-combustion of insurgent clothing, a rapid death through violent trauma, and more probably a morbid combination of both". The request said it should be like "long-range blow torches or precision flame-throwers". They wanted to do with robots things they would find almost unthinkable face-to-face.
While "we" will lose fewer people at first by fighting with warbots, this way of fighting may well catalyse greater attacks on us in the long run. US army staff sergeant Scott Smith boasts warbots create "an almost helpless feeling.... It's total shock and awe." But while terror makes some people shut up, it makes many more furious and determined to strike back.
Imagine if the beaches at Dover and the skies over Westminster were filled with robots controlled from Torah Borah, or Beijing, and could shoot us at any time. Some would scuttle away - and many would be determined to kill "their" people in revenge. The Lebanese editor Rami Khouri says that when Lebanon was bombarded by largely unmanned Israeli drones in 2006, it only "enhanced the spirit of defiance" and made more people back Hezbollah.
Is this a rational way to harness our genius for science and spend tens of billions of pounds? The scientists who were essential to developing the nuclear bomb - including Albert Einstein, Robert Oppenheimer, and Andrei Sakharov - turned on their own creations in horror and begged for them to be outlawed. Some distinguished robotics scientists, like Illah Nourbakhsh, are getting in early, and saying the development of autonomous military robots should be outlawed now.
There are some technologies that are so abhorrent to human beings that we forbid them outright. We have banned war-lasers that permanently blind people along with poison gas. The conveyor belt dragging us ever closer to a world of robot wars can be stopped - if we choose to.
All this money and all this effort can be directed towards saving life, not ever-madder ways of taking it. But we have to decide to do it. We have to make the choice to look the warbot in the eye and say, firmly and forever, "Hasta la vista, baby."
- Posted in
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


38 Comments so far
Show AllOf course one of the most important uses will become the suppression of protests and riots on the homefront (soldiers might hesitate to shoot their fellow citizens). The killer robots will seem like the optimal solution for the fiendish oligarchs unless and until some clever programmers on the left are able to alter the programming to turn the robots on their masters. Then all hell breaks loose, but it is better to risk losing everything than to accept life as a worthless slave. However, it does have the makings of the ultimate tragedy as the fiendish oligarchs apparently believe it is better to risk losing everything than to not take the opportunity to enslave the masses.
Kivals. Absolutely!
I was having brunch with a guy who was an beltway economist contracting with USAID (eco-tourism) The subject of killer drones came up and he regarded them as "neat."
He was concerned that the technology could fall into the wrong hands.I nearly threw up. People just don't get it. "What you gonna do when they come for you."
>>But insurgents are always inventing new ways to block the signal from the control centre, which causes the robot to shut down and "die".<<
Reminds me of the SILLY ending of Lucas' Phantom Mess when the androids "died" without a central command despite examples in the film of them acting in an automatic fashion.
While our warbots operate independently all the time after being given an :objective" to forestall outside programmers taking them over or halting them in their (literal) tracks? Then mistakes, as the article points out -- and confirmed by a friend who worked with robots at GE for thirty years they do make deadly mistakes -- will happen.
Talk about dehumanizing warfare!
Head for the bunker folks -- the robot wars will begin when artificial intelligence figures it needs us no more.
Gary
Precisely. Who says another animal or plant will be the next "dominant specie" once humans are gone. Wait till the nanorobots start being used. Sometimes smaller is deadlier. We may be on the threshold where machines decide they don't need humans, or that humans are a threat. We are actually creating the very thing that will replace us.
Hell, we can't through to the tin ears of cymballic president Robama!
The true evil are the people who think up, design, build and use these things and they aren't just going to be used in other countries, no way.
How many aqueducts, gardens, schools, medical clinics, markets etc. and potential developments beneficial to the creation are not produced due to the full cost of the scope of focus on one warbot?
If you keep going in the direction you're headed in, you'll end up arriving where you're headed. Chomsky was right, our leadership is schizophrenic.
Externalized cost analysis needs to be brought front and center with simple diagrams like those produced by Annie Lenox in the story of stuff.
This is absolutely horrifying. And it's not the first such piece I've read on the subject... just the most recent. The science is advancing! Great.
Reminds me of a particular installment of the old original Star Trek, wherein a planet had been at war with its closest neighbor for 500 years or something. "Battles" were fought electronically (i.e., with computers), and one's civic duty, if one was determined to have become a casuality, was to waltz into a "desintegration chamber" and that was that. Kirk & Co. eventually trashed the computers in question,* telling the planet's leaders something along the lines of "Now you've got a real war on your hands. What are you going to do? You've done such a great job of making war so neat and distant that you've never had a good reason to end it."
But to flash forward from there (to 1991 anyway, so we can continue with the Terminator reference) there's one scene in T2 where Arnold advises young John Connor "It's in your nature to destroy yourselves." Fab. Also quite correct. Certainly not an original thought, that, but one of the more pithy encapsulations of it.
What an exciting period of history for us!
________________________________________________________________________
* The hard-core ST fan will note that this violates the Federation's prime directive (non-interference) of course, but hey. Given the delightfully cheesy special effects of the original series we can all overlook that here.
as long as we remain buried in our consumptive worlds of tv, school, jobs and mortgages, this will continue...
our future certainties? dwindling, and increasingly toxic, resources, and the exponential growth of technological surveillance and control...
our attitudes around property, energy and murder are heavy players...life's purpose, really...what?
The only way out I see is a global, united rejection of technology and energy...on September 22, 2012...
as energy technologies leap forward, of course, the notion of self-powered killing units is diffcult to avoid, or hide from...the window of opportunity is closing...
Rejection of energy? What does that mean? No more photosynthesis?
Rejection of Technology? No Windmills?
The problem is obviously the animate not the inanimate.
The psychopaths in power need to be deposed and a wise and just system imposed.
In my community it is organic gardening,photovoltaics,turbines and woodburning.
What is needed is sensibility and compassion not ideology.
Main Entry: ide·ol·o·gy
Pronunciation: \ˌī-dē-ˈä-lə-jē, ˌi-\
Variant(s): also ide·al·o·gy \-ˈä-lə-jē, -ˈa-\
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural ide·ol·o·gies
Etymology: French idéologie, from idéo- ideo- + -logie -logy
Date: 1813
1 : visionary theorizing
2 a : a systematic body of concepts especially about human life or culture b : a manner or the content of thinking characteristic of an individual, group, or culture c : the integrated assertions, theories and aims that constitute a sociopolitical program
— ide·ol·o·gist \-jist\ noun
Not needed?
Ok you got me dubet, I should have said an absurd ideology. No energy = No life.
I am sure you mean something else but you must explain to be coherant. Only animal energy? Only outdated energy? What do you mean.
I'm not sure what you mean by 'animal energy', but that might be close...
the idea is to exist in harmony with the living environment, and not embellish the natural world to better suit human fancy in ways that ultimately damage it...
eventually, we arrive at metals...
the toxic results of our industrial acts and energy harvesting have, traditionally, been justified with 'humans matter more'...more than what? more than a mountain? more than a river or ocean? more than the planet? how does that thinking work?
gotta go, day is winding down...peace, glen...
twice, I've been called absurd today...ha ha...
We agree, non traditionally harvesting of energy in harmony with nature.
But that is still subjective unless you propose we be naked ( a loom is technology)gatherers
You seem to say no metals, that would eliminate the metal plow.
Do you really think that is a reasonable goal when we seem unable to even end wholesale bloodshed?
It is incredible that we can all look at this and the msm numbnuts will just think it just another sci-fi thriller never giving a thought as to how it will be used on them/us.
And even more incredible is that this is staring us in the face and hardly anyone relates it to another military industrial financial msm congressional aristocracy complex build up to an attack on americans.
"All this money and all this effort can be directed towards saving life, not ever-madder ways of taking it. But we have to decide to do it."
Yes, but two problems:
1. "We" have even less influence than ever before compared to corporations in the wake of yesterday's disastrous, anti-democratic 5-4 SCOTUS decision to allow unlimited corporate funding of election ads.
2. In the age of "Terminator" and "24," many, perhaps most, Americans may be very happy to have "their" robots fighting wars for them, as long as the victims are others.
This is an old concept,... a desire coming out of the late 1800s in which Jules Verne's "Master of the World" and "Rober the Conqueror" and H.G. Wells strory ""The Land Ironclads" saw a "Mechanization" of war, a quite different affair than "Glory and Honor of Battle".
Believe or not two science fiction films depicted todays killer robots ACCURATELY.
Gog, a 1954 science fiction film featured a mini killer robot -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gog_(film)
And a Chuck Norris action movie Code of Silence (1985) ended in a factory with a mini-killer robot.
both of these robots were waist high turrets on tractor treds or special wheels.
The point about being "beyond prosecution" is KEY... that and NO SCRUPLES.
There are already programmed warbots without conscience or scruples. They're called capitalists.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
Excellent point. Now the Supreme Court has permanently rigged our elections in favor of the most corporate of corporate Parties the soullessness of our political and economic system is complete.
Well. This is not totally new. I have heard Singer speak. However. Right now.
There seems to be a kind of inevitability factor here. Choices have been made to create this extravagant sci fi movie. And call it our reality.
Life is about learning. And it seems that we are going to go all the way. Of course it will implode. Of course it is mass suicide.
We are on a collison course with ourselves. Obama getting the Nobel Peace Prize and telling the committee about the necessity of war. Because, as Sarah Palin chimed in later that same day. "Human nature is evil".
This tells me that Obama and Palin are on the same page. Just different styles and yes. I.Qs. But. Fundamentally - as far as basic belief systems go. They are equally dangerous. Because they both assume that human nature is nefarious and we really can't do any better.
In his idiotic acceptance speech, Obama said, "We cannot perfect human nature. But we can perfect the human condition." This was proof enough to me that he is no great intellect. Because it is meaningless gibberish. It is like a college freshman trying to sound deep. And thinking the professor will fall for it.
The 'human condition' has been created by ourselves. Precisely because of such idiotic and primitive beliefs as "original sin". What we believe about our own natures - this is what defines the parameters of the human condition itself.
So. We will continue to play the game til the end. Unless something completely unforseen happens - something truly creative and completely unexpected. We are looking at the endgame.
Learning happens. One way or another. It is part of the meta-design. I have watched it over and over again. Individually and en masse. History repeats because we are supposed to learn through repetition. Even if it means self destruction.
Life is relentless. Yet. It really is quite obvious to those of us who have the awareness to 'see'. We saw this coming, one way or another.
Assassin in stealth
Assailant from Hell
Impervious to damage
Computer on-board
Engaged in a war
Non-stop combatant
...
Burning inside
Godspeed in glide
Battle plan running
A killing machine
Just downright mean
And forever gunning
...
Target to destroy
Arms in employ
Full assault fire threat
Sensors indicate
You will terminate
Life systems disconnect
"Psychotron" by Megadeth (1992)
Dave Mustaine has a way with words and is most always ahead of the curve.
Stop Paying Taxes!
Let's see how long Madness lives when it has to dig through the trash to survive.
I haven't worked (that pays taxes) in 10 years. I ride a bike for transportation. I only pay sales tax on the beer I buy. Food comes from food stamps (just recovering the taxes I've paid in the past).
So - what have you done lately?
My buying habits are very similar to yours. Sounds like a similar tax system too, no taxes on food here in Washington state. i do have a job and an income but i work part-time to keep my income low, and i pay no federal tax.
And the cool thing about the sales tax (on beer or other non-food sales) is that it is state and local, not federal, so the money is not feeding armies of killer robots...
i want to third the call here for tax resistance, among a myriad of opportunities we ALL HAVE for acting in resistance to the death machine.
Capitalism benefits greatly from war robots. Besides being expensive little lumps of metal... eventually the robot's technology will be copied, stolen, and reproduced by our enemies and aimed right back at us. Stock markets will rally and weapons designers will rejoice! Because the MIC Capitalists will then need to re-design, re-upgrade, and re-package their war robots into version 2.0's, ensuring future profits.
Now these technologically advanced 2.0 second generation warrior robots (more deadly than the previous model) will be deployed in defense of democracy. And again they'll be copied, stolen, and reproduced by our enemies. Stock markets will rally and weapons designers will rejoice! Because the MIC Capitalists will again need to re-design, re-upgrade, and re-package their robots into version 3.0's, ensuring future profits.
Now these technologically advanced 3.0 third generation warrior robots (more deadly than the previous model) will be deployed in defense of democracy. Which will again be copied, stolen, and reproduced by our enemies. Stock markets will rally and weapons designers will rejoice! Because the MIC Capitalists will again need to re-design, re-upgrade, and re-package their robots into version 4.0's, ensuring future profits.
Now these technologically advanced 4.0 fourth generation warrior robots (more deadly than the previous model) will be deployed in defense of democracy. And again they'll be copied, stolen, and reproduced by our enemies. Stock markets will rally and weapons designers will rejoice! Because the MIC Capitalists will again need to re-design, re-upgrade, and re-package their robots into version 5.0's, ensuring future profits.
Now these technologically advanced 5.0 fifth generation warrior robots (more deadly than the previous model) will be deployed in defense of democracy. And again they'll be copied, stolen, and reproduced by our enemies. Stock markets will rally and weapons designers will rejoice! Because the MIC Capitalists will again need to re-design, re-upgrade, and re-package their robots into version 6.0's, ensuring future profits.
Now these technologically advanced 6.0 sixth generation warrior robots (more deadly than the previous model) will be deployed in defense of democracy. And again they'll be copied, stolen, and reproduced by our enemies. Stock markets will rally and weapons designers will rejoice! Because the MIC Capitalists will again need to re-design, re-upgrade, and re-package their robots into version 7.0's, ensuring future profits.
Now these technologically advanced 7.0 seventh generation warrior robots (more deadly than the previous model) will be deployed in defense of democracy. And again they'll be copied, stolen, and reproduced by our enemies. Stock markets will rally and weapons designers will rejoice! Because the MIC Capitalists will again need to re-design, re-upgrade, and re-package their robots into version 3.0's, ensuring future profits.
Now these technologic.... Ah Hell! I'm getting tired of this shit!!
Word of advice to you small countries who prefer not to be attacked by war robots... get yourself some nuclear weapons. FAST!
I want to know where they are stamping the nifty Jesus verses.
Perhaps the Warbots will spout Jesus verses as they murder.
glenn ford, this is a most astute post!
One word: "Skynet"
Good lord, what a horrible waste of human ingenuity and effort..
Klaatu barada nikto!
· Yr Obd't Servant
Come on they are just trying to make killing FUN again without having to deal with all that remorse and conscience crap.
Lighten up!
Does anyone else remember that scene near the beginning of "Robocop?"
...you have 15 seconds to put down your weapons...
This is one of the powers stolen from nature and then made artificial. Some prefer to call it artificial intellignence but that is to sanitize the consequences. It is the santition of consequence that keep people from learning. That is what science does. Can anyone here say what part of nature this has been taken?
I disagree with the author inasmuch as robots eventually will be capable of empathy and the like. Remember a few days ago J. Rifkin convinced everyone that we already understood how empathy works because we found a few neurons whose activity correlates with some empathetic behavior?
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/01/19
I have to laugh at humans who mistake their emotional lives as unique to their species. Really emotions are about the least human of everything that our brains do--springing as they do from the reptilian (phylogenetically old) parts of our nervous system. We are better at stuff like reasoning than many of our animal relatives but we have only to consider our dogs to know that we are dunderheads when it comes to empathy.
Furthermore, robots will easily do better at distinguishing combatants from civilians than say pilots dropping bombs from thousands of feet off the ground.
I do agree that there will be many mistakes, false starts, and Frankenstein monsters along the way.
You raise some interesting points but I disagree with your origins. It might be true if we were all brains suspended in air but this comes from a tiny little brain much smaller than your little fingernail.
Stanislaw Lem wrote about the technical and moral implications of a robotized war a long time ago. It would do well to read what he wrote.
A thinking computer, a "Turing Machine", is a long way off if in fact such a thing could ever be created. I agree with Hari as regards the problem with programming - no matter how sophisticated a program is, its bound to be buggy. I used to laugh at the old "Star Wars" proponents (most of whom were in it for the money) who contended that an AMM could destroy an ICBM after both had rocketed along thousands of miles of intercept trajectory. A good deal of the public bought into the nonsense because it really doesn't understand technology.
An automated, mobile, multi-directional targeting machine gun could possibly be programmed to move according to direction algorithms and shoot at moving objects of specific sizes and shapes (possibly programmed to avoid shooting dogs, children, and midgets) can be developed, but the programmed reasoning won't go much further than that. Machines like the Terminator and Johnny 5 just won't be created.
And in final consideration, given the post carbon based energy, post massively wealthy Mad Max world we are heading into, the unlimited outlay of money for the generation of machines of war will become a thing of the past. Putting a weapon in a man's or woman's hand and sending him/her out into the field of battle will be a lot cheaper.
And why do some commenters feel compelled to drag Obama into every blog and essay posted on this site?
Also, when the programmed killing machine can say "Klaatu barada nikto", I'll believe we created our "Turing Machine".