AI warfare

Use of AI in war From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

AI warfare refers to the use of artificial intelligence technologies to automate military operation and enhance or bypass human decision-making in armed conflicts. AI is used to rapidly analyze large volumes of military intelligence data,[1] including making recommendations or decisions on who and what to target.[2] Abdul-Rahman al-Rawi, a 20-year-old student, is the first civilian killed in airstrikes carried out with AI assistance in a US strike in Iraq in 2024.[3] In 2026, the U.S. declared it would become an 'AI-first' warfighting force.[4] Husain et al (2018) coined the term hyperwar to refer to warfare which is algorithmic or controlled by artificial intelligence, with little to no human decision-making.[5][6]

2026 Iran war

The 2026 Iran war has been described as the "first AI war", although the U.S. and Israel have previously used AI to identify targets during the Gaza war.[7] The United States has used AI tools to attack Iran.[8] These tools have been used for military intelligence, targeting, and damage assessment in the war in Iran.[9] Using the Maven smart system, the U.S. attacked 1000 targets in the first 24 hours of the war and 5000 targets over the course of 10 days.[10] While the U.S. had used Maven in 2022 to share targeting information with Ukraine and strike against Iraq, Syria, and against the Houthis in 2024, Iran's attacks are its biggest.[10] Authorities are looking into whether artificial intelligence was involved in the airstrike on an Iranian girls' school that killed 170 civilians, the majority of whom were female students.[11] The United States Central Command emphasized that humans were making final targeting decisions.[12]

Per a White House tally released on April 8, the U.S. military hit over 13,000 targets in Iran during the war's first 38 days, including more than 2,000 command-and-control sites, 1,500 air defense targets, and 1,450 industrial infrastructure targets.[13]

Gaza war

As part of the Gaza war, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have used artificial intelligence to rapidly and automatically perform much of the process of determining what to bomb. Israel uses an AI system dubbed "Habsora", "the Gospel", to determine which targets the Israeli Air Force would bomb.[14] It automatically provides a targeting recommendation to a human analyst,[15][16] who decides whether to pass it along to soldiers in the field.[16]

Israel deployed AI technologies during the Gaza war for audio analysis, facial recognition, and airstrike targeting. One such system was used to help identify the location of Hamas commander Ibrahim Biari through phone call analysis, leading to strikes that killed him as well as more than 125 civilians.[17]

2022 Russian Ukraine war

Kyiv launched a project with Palantir called Brave1 Dataroom to build AI systems using the extensive combat data Ukraine has gathered since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022. The country has also created tools for in-depth airstrike analysis, introduced AI to process large volumes of intelligence, and incorporated these technologies into the planning of long-range strike operations.[18]

Involved companies

Maven Smart System is developed by Palantir. It integrates Anthropic's Claude as its large language model, and uses Amazon's AWS servers as its cloud infrastructure.[19] Since Anthropic's refusal to support autonomous weapons development and domestic surveillance efforts. In its place, other AI firms, including OpenAI, have been brought in to take over that role.[13]

Involved state actors

In 2024, the United States Department of Defense had 800+ active AI-related projects and requested $1.8bn in AI funding, with Project Maven and Project Artemis (AI-resistant drones developed together with Ukraine) being the main ones.[20] The technology has been used in Iran, Iraq, Syria and Yemen to identify targets.[19]

Israel deployed AI systems Gospel (targeting buildings) and Lavender (identifying individuals) extensively during the Gaza conflict.[21] They were both developed by Unit 8200.

China is pursuing intelligentized warfare, integrating AI across all combat domains — land, sea, air, space, and cyber — with military AI spending exceeding $1.6bn annually.[22]

International regulation

Since 2014, states meeting within the framework of the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons have discussed lethal autonomous weapon systems. In 2016, the treaty's states parties established an open-ended Group of Governmental Experts on Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems to continue those discussions.[23] The discussions have addressed international humanitarian law, accountability, possible prohibitions and regulations, and the extent of human control required over AI-enabled weapons.[24]

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI