China Daily (Hong Kong)

Japan to beef up deploying AI technology in military defense

- By CAI HONG caihong@chinadaily.com.cn ‘Enormous benefits’

The Japanese government will launch the process of selecting a drone in fiscal 2019, which starts on April 1. The country plans to include three maritime surveillan­ce drones in the procuremen­t program for fiscal years 2019 to 2023 and 20 more drones after that.

This is part of the country’s efforts to add artificial intelligen­ce and drones to its defense capabiliti­es, according to Japanese media.

Japan is joining other global powers in competitio­n for developing and deploying AI in military contexts. Tokyo has released an AI technology strategy with a threephase plan to achieve a true AI ecosystem. Building on successes in robotics, the Japanese government envisions joining AI with other advanced technologi­es, such as the internet of things, autonomous vehicles and the blending of cyberspace and physical space.

In fiscal 2021, Japan’s Air SelfDefens­e Force will deploy the US-made Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicle and establish a special unit to handle the drones.

An underwater drone will be developed for the Maritime SDF to gather informatio­n.

Japan’s new defense guidelines, which Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s Cabinet approved in December, envisage the establishm­ent of space and cyberdefen­se units, while the applicatio­n of AI will be expanded.

Japan wants to use advanced technologi­es, such as AI, in part to compensate for its low birthrate and population decline.

The country will also set up an unmanned aircraft department to enable permanent control of its air space and informatio­n gathering in “remote regions”.

Other countries and organizati­ons, including the United States, Russia, China, Australia, Canada, Denmark, the European Union Commission, Finland, France, Germany, India, Italy, Kenya, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, the NordicBalt­ic region, Poland, Singapore, the Republic of Korea, Sweden, Tunisia, the United Arab Emirates and the United Kingdom, have some sort of AI strategy.

To the degree that AI includes more players, it increases the “risk that countries may put aside the safety and reliabilit­y concerns” that experts have expressed given AI’s capacity for social and political disruption, according to a study released by the Washington-based think tank Center for a New American Security last year.

In November at the Web Summit, Europe’s biggest tech conference, in Lisbon, Portugal, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres praised the “enormous benefits” of new technology. He also warned that it would be “morally repugnant” if the world fails to ban autonomous machines capable of killing people without human involvemen­t.

US politician­s have played up the “threat” of AI weapons from China and Russia. They have criticized the US Congress and the Trump administra­tion for not paying sufficient attention to AI. The US government’s investment in AI, in their words, has been essentiall­y flat.

A report published by the Subcommitt­ee on Informatio­n Technology of the US House Committee on Oversight and Reform expressed concerns about the prospect of Russia or China overtaking the US in AI. “AI is likely to have a significan­t impact in cybersecur­ity, and American competitiv­eness in AI will be critical to ensuring the United States does not lose any decisive cybersecur­ity advantage to other nation states,” the report said.

The Congressio­nal Research Service, the in-house independen­t think tank of the US Congress, released a report in November detailing the future of military uses of robotics and artificial intelligen­ce. According to the report, Russia and China are “aggressive­ly pursuing” advanced robotic and AI weapons systems “that could be used against US forces”. Meanwhile, the US military is looking to introduce robotic tanks and autonomous cargo vehicles. It is also looking into something called the Fully Autonomous First Wave Concept, which would involve “robotic and autonomous aerial, amphibious and ground platforms … employed as the first wave of an amphibious assault,” the CRS report said.

But a 2018 white paper on the state of AI in China, released by Chinese organizati­ons including the Chinese Associatio­n for Artificial Intelligen­ce, found that the US is a hotbed of AI talent. The US has more than 13,000 top AI researcher­s, compared with only 5,000 in China.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China