Monday, September 28, 2020

US Army Wants To Use AI Platforms To Coordinate And Launch 'Lightning-Fast' Attacks

Howiter artillery vehicle at Yuma Proving Grounds, Ariz. being used in the Army's Project Convergence 2020. (Kris Osborn)

FOX News/Warrior Maven: 'Attacking at speed': Army Project Convergence and breakthrough lightning-fast war

The exercise was a part of the Army’s Project Convergence 2020

The U.S. military recently conducted a live-fire full combat replication with unmanned-to-unmanned teaming guiding attacks, small reconnaissance drones, satellites sending target coordinates to ground artillery and high-speed, AI-enabled “networked” warfare. This exercise was a part of the Army’s Project Convergence 2020, a weapons and platform combat experiment which, service leaders say, represents a massive transformation helping the service pivot its weapons use, tactics and maneuver strategies into a new era.

Taking place at Yuma Proving Grounds, Arizona, Project Convergence involved live-fire war experiments aligned in three distinct phases, intended to help the Army cultivate its emerging modern Combined Arms Maneuver strategy. Through carefully coordinated attack maneuvers, the force sought to hit and disable the outer defensive perimeter of an enemy system such as its air defenses.

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WNU Editor: This explains why the US Army is trying to hire/recruit code-writers into their ranks.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm sure the army is aware and taken into account that the "community of coders" they are trying to recruit has many anti-military people in it.
Sennacherib

Anonymous said...


This attempt to enhance destructability is dependent on secure communications. If I considered myself to be the target in the future I certainly would be putting a goodly portion of my budget into electronic disruptions and spoofing.
For an example try "Linebacker; The untold story of the air raids over North Vietnam. Talk about total dominance of the electronic spectrum the Russians and N. Viets used during the B-52 Raids in late 1972...this is an eye opening book

Anonymous said...

During Vietnam our electronic op/sec sucked in almost every area and at every level