War, in the most callous sense, is a way of resolving disputes.
But what impact would robotic soldiers have on the battle-field? Since the Second World War, civilian casualties of war have come to be considered as unacceptable as using poisonous gas was then. By 2015, the US government plans to have robots driving a proportion of their war vehicles. This makes sense — why should soldier’s lives be put in danger unnecessarily?
If soldiers are no longer in danger when the US wants to exert its influence, though, there’ll be no calls from US citizens to withdraw from Vietnam/Iraq-style wars. In fact, there’ll be no disincentive for the US at all. Already, in the Afghanistan war which removed the Taliban, the enemy have surrendered to unmanned vehicles…
When the US invades a future Iran without having to risk a single soldier, are the people of the US (who are famous, whether fairly or not, for being insular) going to be up in arms over the deaths foreign soldiers and/or partisans at the hands of the US military machine?
This isn’t the only concern, either, what happens when, inevitably, the Chinese or another future super-power, ape this technology? When the US and China come to blows in an automated army future, will the resolution of war just be the country most able to make robots quickly? And, if so, does war stop being some ultimate solution to a dispute and instead become the first course? Or, bizarrely, does it become pointless anyway — just another form of economic sanctions?
I look forward to a time when your car can drive you home from a night at the pub but should we be worried or excited about the implications on war?
I would suggest that we should be extremely concerned in the short-term and extremely optimistic in the long-term. What do you think?










May 2nd, 2006 at 4:26 pm
What about robotic journalists getting right in the middle of the action, that would be enough to turn people against war.
I think robotic soldiers will be dangerous for the USA, imagine a journalist gets in the action and beams video back of 200 or so robotic US soldiers wiping out an army of 2000 or so humans, I believe the public reaction would be empathy towards the humans and hostility towards the robots in most situations.
People also like to see the underdog win, thats not the case if they are shooting our human soldiers but if its just robots I think the feeling will be different.
The public will view it almost as unsporting, unfair, not right. I think there will be an even bigger reaction from the left than there is now.
My dad jokes it would be funny if one of Saddams crappy tanks defeated one of the best US tanks in a fight. I don’t agree with him and didn’t find it funny, but if it was just robots maybe I would..
May 2nd, 2006 at 4:36 pm
Before the first gulf war Saddam had one of the largest tank armies in the world — the US destroyed it without a single Iraqi tank being able to see the US tanks… That’s scary enough and also unsporting…
I agree with all that you say…
May 3rd, 2006 at 3:32 pm
Or it might be cheaper to brain wash hordes of young men into living bombs to send against a potential enemy, not that you are likely to find anyone so unethical to do that …