RSS
Логотип
Баннер в шапке 1
Баннер в шапке 2
2023/11/15 12:16:30

Artificial intelligence at the Pentagon

.

Content

The main articles are:

2024: First successful AI tests to control combat aircraft

In early May 2024, the Associated Press, citing representatives Pentagon , reported that UNITED STATES AIR FORCE for the first time they successfully tested artificial intelligence (AI) to control a combat aircraft: according to the publication, the F-16 independently conducted a training air battle. More. here

2023

Pentagon publishes military strategy in the field of AI

In early November 2023, the Pentagon unveiled a strategy on data, analytics and artificial intelligence that aims to improve battlefield decision-making. The document was prepared by the General Directorate of Digital Technologies and Artificial Intelligence (CDAO).

The strategy was announced by US Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks. This is an updated and revised version of the document released in 2018. According to Hicks, the strategy takes into account the latest achievements in areas such as decentralized data management, generative AI, etc. It is noted that the task of the Ministry of Defense is to introduce new technologies and AI tools "wherever they can bring the greatest military value."

Pentagon unveils strategy on data, analytics and artificial intelligence

The document includes sections that highlight the key results that the agency plans to achieve with AI. These include removing political barriers, investing in compatible and federated infrastructure, improving data management, and increasing the number of AI professionals. AI is expected to help conduct a comprehensive analysis of forces on the battlefield, as well as generate summaries of data. The Defense Ministry also intends to use AI to automate simple tasks. At the same time, the document indicates the potential danger of AI - when it comes to controlling combat systems.

In general, instead of identifying several specific combat capabilities using AI, the strategy describes an approach to strengthening the organizational environment in which people can constantly use the capabilities of neural networks to gain a sustainable advantage in decision-making. This will make it possible to form the most effective strategies in a wide variety of military scenarios.

Department of Defence Data, Analytics, and Artificial Intelligence Adoption Strategy

Setting up AI watchdog group

On August 10, 2023, the US Department of Defense announced the formation of a special Lima working group to explore possible scenarios for using generative artificial intelligence in the national interest.

AI, as noted, has become a breakthrough technology capable of revolutionizing various sectors, including defense. Using generative AI models, the Pentagon expects to improve the effectiveness of its activities in areas such as combat, partner and supplier engagement, health care, response speed and the political sphere.

The US Department of Defense announced the formation of a special working group Lima, which will study possible scenarios for the use of generative artificial intelligence
File:Aquote1.png
The use of artificial intelligence in defense concerns not only the introduction of innovative technologies, but also the strengthening of national security. The Department of Defense sees the potential of generative AI to significantly improve intelligence, operational planning, as well as administrative and business processes, said U.S. Navy Captain Manuel Xavier Lugo, commander of Lima.
File:Aquote2.png

Lima specialists, among other things, will study issues related to the safe implementation of generative AI systems. In addition, the new group will have to find out how such technologies can be used by US opponents. Lima will partner with various DoD entities, government agencies and intelligence departments to minimize the risks associated with using artificial intelligence.

It is noted that the creation of Lima is partly dictated by increased tensions between the United States and China in the technological sphere, including AI. On August 9, 2023, US President Joe Biden signed a decree restricting investment in certain technologies and products in countries of "concern." China is named such a state, including the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau.[1]

The US Air Force told how ChatGPT will help the Pentagon

At the end of February 2023, US Air Force Chief information officer Lauren Barrett Knausenberger announced that the ChatGPT chatbot could improve the work of the US Department of Defense. In particular, according to her, artificial intelligence is able to simplify document management and synchronization of tasks between all military units. Read more here.

2022

Pentagon signs strategy to develop responsible artificial intelligence for military purposes

On June 22, 2022, Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks signed the document "Strategy and Implementation of Responsible" artificial intelligence(RAI S&I pathway), which was the next step in implementing the Pentagon AI principles approved in 2020. More. here

Training of military AI systems in Ukraine

The Pentagon uses artificial intelligence and machine learning tools to analyze vast amounts of data, obtain useful battlefield intelligence and study Russia's tactics and strategy in Ukraine. This was announced at the end of April 2022 by a senior representative of the US Department of Defense.

File:Aquote1.png
What you don't see is our sophisticated intelligence capabilities capable of controlling the battlefield, including collecting and archiving signal intelligence data, "said Maynard Holiday, director of defense research and engineering for modernization. - We will definitely analyze everything that we saw regarding Russian tactics. And all this will fall into a database that we can train and then test in military simulations.
File:Aquote2.png

Training of military AI systems in Ukraine

The United States does not report how much intelligence from the battlefield is transmitted to Ukraine. According to FCW, the United States does not use drones in Ukraine, but commercial NoLimit Electronics provide the public with large volumes of photographs and images.

The data obtained during this military conflict will help the military better model and anticipate how an advanced enemy, especially Russia and China, will behave in the real world. This is what, according to US military leaders, should begin to happen as early as 2022.

Gregory Allen, leader of the AI Governance Project and a senior fellow in the strategic technology program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, noted that over the past few years, AI military tools for finding and tracking specific objects on personnel have improved significantly. In addition, the military began to use the same tools to work with satellite photographs.

Allen says military AI has come a long way since 2017, when the public learned about Project Maven, the military's object recognition program.

File:Aquote1.png
Artificial intelligence [and] machine learning are becoming an increasingly capable and increasingly common factor in United States intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance operations, "he said. This turned out to be very useful for tracking what is happening in Ukraine. The US Department of Defense and our allies are taking advantage of what has been created over the last five years.[2]
File:Aquote2.png

Appointment of Martell Craig as director of digital and AI

USA machine learning Lyft On April 25, 2022, the Ministry of Defense announced that ex-head of department Craig Martell was appointed as the first ever director of digital technology and artificial intelligence. Pentagon More. here

2021: Pentagon creates AI and data chief position

On November 29, 2021, it became known about the creation at the US Department of Defense (DoD) of the position of Head of Data and Artificial Intelligence (CDAO) to oversee the management of agencies focused on innovation, AI projects and work with data.

Consolidated oversight through the creation of an authorized CDAO could help the Pentagon ensure that the tools needed to make gains in U.S. defense innovation and security are in place.

US Department of Defense creates position of head of AI and data

The new position will be overseeing the Joint Artificial Intelligence Centre (JAIC), the office of the Chief Data Officer (CDO) and the Digital Defence Service (DDS). As a result of the change, offices will be excluded from the competence of the Deputy Ministers of Defense, Director of Information Technology and Minister of Defense. After the introduction of a new position, subagents will report to one official.

The consolidation of CDO, JAIC, and DDS units under CDAO represents the potential for organizational growth for the Department of Defense in dealing with data and new technologies. The CDO is responsible for data management and coordination throughout the Department. The JAIC was created to help DoD incorporate and implement the use of artificial intelligence. DDS was created to address data and security issues. All of these disconnected organizations control an important part of data and new technologies - combining them is likely to help DoD optimize the organization's internal processes.

Who will take the post of director of data and artificial intelligence at the Pentagon is not reported by December 7, 2021. This position may be obtained by Jim Miter, head of the analytical company Govini, who worked on the US national defense strategy and in December 2021 returned to work in the US Department of Defense. A spokesman for Meater confirmed his return to Fedscoop, but refrained from commenting further.[3]

2020: Introduction of new ethical principles for using artificial intelligence technologies on the battlefield

At the end of February 2020, the Pentagon adopted new ethical principles for the use of artificial intelligence technologies on the battlefield. According to these recommendations, AI should be "responsible," "proportionate," "understandable," "reliable" and "manageable."

The new principles require people to "exercise an appropriate level of caution" when deploying and using AI systems, such as systems that scan aerial photos to find targets. It is also noted that decisions made by automated systems must be "traceable" and "manageable," that is, "there must be a way to disable or deactivate" them if necessary.

Pentagon adopts new ethical principles for using artificial intelligence in combat

Proportionality in the Pentagon means "necessary steps to minimize unintentional bias" of combat vehicles. The military must also possess the necessary technology and operational skills that will ensure transparency of procedures and documentation. In addition, AI should have "well-outlined functions," as well as be constantly tested during development and operation.

A previous 2012 military directive required people to be able to control automated weapons, but did not address the wider use of AI. The new principles are being developed by the Pentagon expert center, which, in addition to the military and officials, uses the opinions of technical experts. They follow recommendations presented in 2019 by the Military Innovation Council, a group led by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt.

While the Pentagon has acknowledged that AI "generates new ethical ambiguities and risks," the new principles do not provide the strict limits that arms control advocates require. Apparently, the new principles deliberately imply a broad interpretation so as not to constrain soldiers with specific restrictions in the future.[4]

File:Aquote1.png
See also Combat robots and drones
File:Aquote2.png

2018

Investing $2 billion in artificial intelligence for weapons

In early September 2018, the US Department of Defense announced a $2 billion investment in the development of artificial intelligence technologies designed for use in weapons.

The Pentagon says that military commanders want computers to explain to them their intentions and the reasons for making certain decisions. The improvement of weapons systems will occur systematically over five years, and the main goal of new investments is considered rivalry with China and Russia in terms of defense and offensive capabilities.

US Department of Defense seeks to actively develop AI technologies

Most of the AI projects in the Pentagon are being developed by the controlled Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Employees of this unit are engaged in the improvement and implementation of artificial intelligence systems in various weapons. DARPA is working to empower machines to communicate and think the same way people do.

In addition, the American authorities support the development of AI systems that allow robots to quickly identify videos, images and audio recordings with tracked and potentially dangerous content on the network.

Investment in artificial intelligence is by the standards of other spending costs, Pentagon where, for example, the cost of buying and maintaining new F-35 combat aircraft is expected to exceed a trillion dollars. However, we are talking about the largest state AI programs, and the costs of them are comparable to the amounts that the United States spent on the Manhattan project, which produced nuclear weapons in the 1940s, notes The Verge.

While artificial intelligence has helped American weapons better recognize targets and combat drones fly more efficiently, by early September 2018, computer systems that make self-inflicted strike decisions are not approved by the Pentagon.[5]

Development of AI programs for protection against a nuclear missile strike

The US military is increasing spending on secret projects, the purpose of which is to artificial intelligence use a nuclear missile strike to anticipate and identify the location of mobile launchers. AI developments, Pentagon which had not previously been publicly reported, were reported by the agency in early June 2018 Reuters , citing knowledgeable sources.

According to American officials, whose names have not been disclosed, several programs are being implemented in the United States at once under the heading "secret," within which it is planned to create AI systems to increase US protection against a potential nuclear missile strike.

Pentagon develops AI programs to protect against nuclear missile strike

If scientific research is successful, developed computer systems will be able to independently think, quickly and more accurately, people collect a lot of data, including satellite images, and find signs of an impending rocket launch on them.

Having received such information in advance, the American government will be able to take diplomatic steps to resolve the situation, and if an attack is imminent, the military will have more time to try to destroy the missiles before launching them or intercept them.

File:Aquote1.png
We must do everything in our power to find the rocket before launch and try to make it as difficult as possible to launch it from the ground, "said one of the agency's interlocutors.
File:Aquote2.png

From several US officials, as well as from budget documentation, journalists learned that the administration of President Donald Trump proposed more than tripling funding for such developments and allocating $83 million for only one of the programs for anti-missile protection using artificial intelligence. The increase in allocations indicates the growing importance for the United States of research in the field of creating AI systems of nuclear missile defense in the context of the overwhelming military power of Russia and the alleged continuing nuclear threat from North Korea.

File:Aquote1.png
With artificial intelligence and machine learning, you can find a needle in a haystack, "said former US Deputy Secretary of Defense Bob Work, who worked closely on the topic of military robots and AI technologies. He did not mention specific projects.
File:Aquote2.png

One of the sources told Reuters that the emphasis in the Pentagon's pilot AI programs is on protection from Pyongyang. There is growing alarm in Washington over North Korea's ongoing development of mobile-launched missiles that can be sheltered in tunnels, forests or caves.

Although military AI projects are kept secret, the Pentagon does not hide its interest in artificial intelligence technologies. In particular, the so-called "Project Maven" received widespread media coverage, involving the use of AI to analyze drone images and recognize people in images. The Google corporation involved in the project in June 2018 was forced to announce the termination of cooperation with the US Department of Defense due to the dissatisfaction of its employees.

Details about the Pentagon's work to build AI systems to detect potential missile threats and mobile launchers are scant, but Reuters was able to learn that the first prototypes are already being tested by the military.

According to the agency, both military specialists and private researchers are involved in the project, which is being worked on on the territory of Washington. Scientists tailor for their purposes technological advances developed by commercial firms that are funded by the venture capital fund In-Q-Tel associated with. CIA[6]

Creating an artificial intelligence center

In April 2018, the US Department of Defense announced the creation of an artificial intelligence center, within which it plans to combine all state AI projects carried out in the country.

According to the Defense News newspaper, the idea of ​ ​ creating an AI center was first voiced by Secretary of Defense James Mattis. At a hearing before the Armed Services Committee of the House of Representatives of the US Congress, he said that the Pentagon is considering forming a "joint office in which all the efforts of the Ministry of Defense could be concentrated, since various efforts are currently underway in the field of artificial intelligence."

File:Aquote1.png
We want to unite all these efforts, "he said.
File:Aquote2.png

As the Deputy Secretary  of Defense for Research and Development Michael Griffin clarified, by April 2018, the Pentagon decides who will lead the center, where it will be located, what projects it will deal with, and most importantly, how such a center will fit into the general strategy for the development of artificial intelligence of the ministry and the nation as a whole. It is assumed that the center will establish close cooperation with American universities.

Pentagon, fearing achievements of Russia and China, creates an artificial intelligence center

Griffin calls artificial intelligence one of the key technologies along with hypersonic, and emphasizes that this is the main direction of his activities as deputy minister. According to Griffin, by April 2018, the Pentagon is developing almost 600 projects where forms of artificial intelligence are present in one way or another.

Billionaire Elon Musk believes that artificial intelligence created by authoritarian governments can become an immortal dictator from which no one can escape.

In the United States, they thought about creating an artificial intelligence center against the background of how Russia and China began to actively invest in this area.[7]

Notes