Russian President Vladimir Putin, flanked by senior Russian officials, watches the Zapad-2017 war games in the Leningrad region, Russia September 18, 2017. Sputnik/Mikhail Klimentyev/Kremlin via REUTERS
Peter Apps, Reuters: The coming robot arms race
Russia’s latest “Zapad” military exercise is underway on NATO’S eastern border. Tens of thousands of soldiers are taking part in the massive four-yearly war games that are both a drill as well as a show of strength for the West. Next time around, in 2021, those troops might be sharing their battle space with a different type of force: self-driving drones, tanks, ships and submersibles.
Drone warfare is hardly new – the first lethal attack conducted by an American unmanned aerial vehicle took place in Afghanistan in October 2001. What is now changing fast, however, is the ability of such unmanned systems to operate without a guiding human hand.
That’s a truly revolutionary shift – and one every major nation wants to be lead. Critics have long feared countries might be more willing to go to war with unmanned systems. Now, some see a very real risk control might pass beyond human beings altogether.
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WNU Editor: The Russian government has invested enormous resources in developing unmanned and robotic systems for their military. Will this be successful .... I do not know. But the successful use of drones by the U.S. to conduct warfare has made everyone aware on what is the potential of this technology, and this "robot arms race" is probably just starting.
1 comment:
Absolutely this will be successful. Better and faster systems. DRadler. .stealthier etc
You can already see the drop off airforce pilots...with that I mean humans inside airplanes. .ie manned aircraft. You see the next big wave which is unmanned, remotely controlled (non and semi autonomous drones) already happening for years. The next step is autonomous single drones, followed by autonomous drone swarms. And then the next wave will come in terms of speed, longer flight missions, different engines/reactors on board, etc. Then you'll also have much better stealth - just imagine drones flying at very low altitudes avoiding radar, in the depth of the ocean where humans just can't go or the size of the vessel would have to be too huge and, of course, in space. I can also imagine that soon we'll park of secondary drone/satellite systems that can act as quick backup of one/several go down.there's no technical reason why they couldn't be parked in higher orbit, or even further away. Just look at cassini - that's decades old technology. Millions of miles in space. On a much much smaller budget than the F22, and a fraction of a fraction of the F35.
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