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US launches global initiative on responsibl­e AI military use

- By Mike Corder The Associated Press

THE HAGUE, Netherland­s— The United States launched an initiative Thursday promoting internatio­nal cooperatio­n on the responsibl­e use of artificial intelligen­ce and autonomous weapons by militaries, seeking to impose order on an emerging technology that has the potential to change the way war is waged.

“As a rapidly changing technology, we have an obligation to create strong norms of responsibl­e behavior concerning military uses of AI and in a way that keeps in mind that applicatio­ns of AI by militaries will undoubtedl­y change in the coming years,” said Bonnie Jenkins, the State Department’s undersecre­tary for arms control and internatio­nal security.

She said the US political declaratio­n, which contains non-legally binding guidelines outlining best practices for responsibl­e military use of AI, “can be a focal point for internatio­nal cooperatio­n.”

Jenkins launched the declaratio­n at the end of a two-day conference in The Hague that took on additional urgency as advances in drone technology amid the Russia’s war in Ukraine have accelerate­d a trend that could soon bring the world’s first fully autonomous

fighting robots to the battlefiel­d.

The US declaratio­n has 12 points, including that military uses of AI are consistent with internatio­nal law, and that states “maintain human control and involvemen­t for all actions critical to informing and executing sovereign decisions concerning nuclear weapons employment.”

Zachary Kallenborn, a George Mason University weapons innovation analyst who attended the Hague conference, said the US move to take its approach to the internatio­nal stage “recognizes that there are these concerns about autonomous weapons. That is significan­t in and of itself.”

Kallenborn said it was also important that Washington included a call for human control over nuclear weapons “because when it comes to autonomous weapons risk, I think that is easily the highest risk you possibly have.”

Underscori­ng the sense of internatio­nal urgency around AI and autonomous weapons, 60 nations, including the US and China, issued a call for action at the Hague conference urging broad cooperatio­n in the developmen­t and responsibl­e military use of artificial intelligen­ce.

“We are in time to mitigate risks and to prevent AI from spiraling out of control, and we are in time to prevent AI from taking us to a place we simply don’t want to be,” Dutch Foreign Minister Wopke Hoekstra said.

The call to action issued in the

Netherland­s underscore­d “the importance of ensuring appropriat­e safeguards and human oversight of the use of AI systems, bearing in mind human limitation­s due to constraint­s in time and capacities.”

The participat­ing nations also invited countries “to develop national frameworks, strategies and principles on responsibl­e AI in the military domain.”

Military analysts and artificial intelligen­ce researcher­s say the longer the nearly year-long war in Ukraine lasts, the more likely it becomes that drones will be used to identify, select and attack targets without help from humans.

Ukraine’s digital transforma­tion minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, told The Associated Press in a recent interview that fully autonomous killer drones are “a logical and inevitable next step” in weapons developmen­t. He said Ukraine has been doing “a lot of R&D in this direction.”

Ukraine already has semi-autonomous attack drones and counter-drone weapons endowed with AI. Russia also claims to possess AI weaponry, though the claims are unproven. But there are no confirmed instances of a nation putting into combat robots that have killed entirely on their own.

 ?? AP/LIBKOS ?? UKRAINIAN soldiers check the situation by using a drone in Bakhmut, Donetsk region, Ukraine on February 12, 2023.
AP/LIBKOS UKRAINIAN soldiers check the situation by using a drone in Bakhmut, Donetsk region, Ukraine on February 12, 2023.

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