Killer Robots and the Fetish of Automation

Review of AI, Automation, and War: The Rise of a Military-Tech Complex by Anthony King (Princeton University Press, 2025).

For far too long, two specters have been haunting the world of artificial intelligence and warfare, and they both featured in the same movie. The first is Skynet — the specter of general artificial intelligence achieving consciousness and turning against its creators. The second is the Terminator itself — the anthropomorphized killing machine that has dominated our collective imagination about automated warfare. These twin phantoms have served as convenient distractions while a more prosaic but equally revolutionary transformation has unfolded: the gradual automation of the broader organizational and operational structures of the military through the merger of Silicon Valley and the military-industrial complex.

Anthony King’s AI, Automation, and War is sociology that reads like an illuminating intelligence briefing, rich in description and light on both jargon and normative positions. It is based on interviews with 123 insiders across the developing US, UK, and Israeli tech-military complex. His analysis seeks to demystify some of the most egregious forms of “AI fetishism,” while shifting the focus to actual developments and their influence on the social arrangements of war.

His argument is clear: The fears (and hopes) of full autonomy are misplaced. AI is not “replacing humans.” Nor is the idea of human-machine teaming — which places weapons or systems on an equal footing with human agents — accurate. What we are seeing instead are decision-support systems: tools, if transformational ones, that enable planning, targeting, and cyber operations. Such tools are and will be “used primarily to improve military understanding and intelligence.” In the process, civil-military relationships are changing.

King is right to shift the focus of the discussion away from the apocalyptic fetish of killer robots and superintelligence….

La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: Ioannis Kalpouzos

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