Civilian, military and technology officials from over 140 countries met in Vienna on Monday, April 29, to address the integration of artificial intelligence with military technologies. At this inaugural international conference on autonomous weapons systems, attendees were warned about the urgent need to manage AI’s role in modern warfare.
Federal Minister for European and International Affairs of Austria Alexander Schallenberg highlighted the pace of technology outstripping political action.
“Autonomous weapons systems will soon fill the world’s battlefields,” Schallenberg said. “We already see this with AI-enabled drones and AI-based target selection.”
Artificial intelligence is revolutionizing military operations, enabling drones to strike strategic targets deep behind enemy lines with unprecedented precision. The rapid increase in lethal autonomous weapons has sparked a heated debate about the ethics and controllability of this technology.
Schallenberg likened the current moment to a pivotal point in history, urging international cooperation to ensure human oversight in weapon systems.
“This is, I believe, the Oppenheimer moment of our generation,” Schallenberg said. “We cannot let this moment pass without taking action.”
States are increasingly using weapons with autonomous capabilities in conflict zones like Ukraine, Gaza and the Middle East. U.S. forces have been employing this technology to enhance intelligence gathering from drones and satellite imagery.
The Armed Forces of Ukraine are now deploying first-person view drones with auto-targeting capabilities, indicating that AI guides these drones to their targets even after video feed loss.
Jaan Tallinn, co-founder of the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk, discussed the trade-offs of delegating decisions to automated systems.
“Decisions that might be too fast for humans to make themselves, but there is a tradeoff,” Tallinn said. “Whenever you opt for speed you give up control. Autonomous weapons that promise the advantage of speed do not allow for accountable human control and therefore risk destabilizing the very international order.”
While some argue that AI-assisted weapons could reduce unintended civilian casualties and aid smaller nations, critics warn of potential catastrophic errors and ethical dilemmas in delegating critical combat decisions to algorithms.
“Accidental errors caused by autonomous weapons have the potential to spark the kinds of wars that should never be waged,” Tallinn said, noting the dangers of errors in autonomous weapons. “No autonomous weapon should be designed or used to target a human, nor should it be used to distinguish between one human and another.”
In the spring of 2020, an autonomous drone strike in Libya involved Turkish-made drones weighing 15 pounds each, operating without human intervention to target forces of the Libyan National Army. These drones were equipped with advanced autonomous targeting, capable of swarm operation, resistant to GPS and radio jamming, and included facial recognition software to identify human targets.
Schallenberg emphasized the profound questions posed by this technology.
“We are faced with profound legal, ethical and security questions,” Schallenberg said. “How to prevent seeding life and death decisions to machines. How to deal with algorithms prone to mistakes and bias. How to stop an AI-driven arms race and to keep the technology out of the hands of terrorists.”
In 2023, Austria led the first United Nations resolution on autonomous weapon systems. The United Nations secretary-general recommended that by 2026, states should agree on a legally binding instrument to ban lethal autonomous weapon systems operating without human control or oversight.
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Author: Lauren Taylor
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