Kuwait Times

Civilian deaths in Gaza test Zionist AI precision claims

-

PARIS: The Zionist military has said AI helps it more accurately target militants in its five-month war against Hamas, but as Gaza deaths rise, experts are questionin­g how effective algorithms can really be. The health ministry in the Gaza Strip says the war has killed upwards of 30,000 people, the majority of them civilians.

“Either the AI is as good as claimed and the IDF (Zionist military) doesn’t care about collateral damage, or the AI is not as good as claimed,” Toby Walsh, chief scientist at the University of New South Wales AI Institute in Australia, told AFP.

The health ministry does not specify how many militants are included in the Gaza toll. The Zionist entity has said its forces “eliminated 10,000 terrorists” since the war began in early October, following a deadly attack by Hamas on the Zionist entity’s southern communitie­s and military bases, which killed 1,160 people.

The entity’s claimed use of algorithms adds another layer of concern for activists already alarmed by artificial intelligen­ce-powered hardware like drones and gunsights that are being deployed in Gaza. The Zionist military told AFP it had no comment on its AI targeting systems. But the army has repeatedly claimed its forces target only militants and take measures to avoid harm to civilians.

‘Precise attacks’

The Zionist entity began hyping AI-powered targeting after an 11-day conflict in Gaza during May 2021, which commanders branded the world’s “first AI war”. The military chief during the 2021 war, Aviv Kochavi, told Zionist news website Ynet last year that the force had used AI systems to identify “100 new targets every day”. “In the past, we would produce 50 targets in Gaza in a year,” he said.

A blog entry on the Zionist military’s website posted after it launched its recent attack on Gaza said its AI-enhanced “targeting directorat­e” had identified more than 12,000 targets in just 27 days. An unnamed Zionist official was quoted as saying the AI system, called Gospel, produced targets “for precise attacks on infrastruc­ture associated with Hamas, inflicting

great damage on the enemy and minimal harm to those not involved”. But an anonymous former Zionist intelligen­ce officer, quoted in November by independen­t publicatio­n +972 Magazine, described Gospel’s work as creating a “mass assassinat­ion factory”. Citing an intelligen­ce source, the report said Gospel crunches vast amounts of data faster than “tens of thousands of intelligen­ce officers” and identifies, in real time, locations likely to be used by suspected militants. However, the sources gave no detail of the data put into the system or the criteria used to determine the targets.

‘Dubious data’

Several experts told AFP the military was likely to be feeding the system with drone footage, social media posts, informatio­n from agents on the ground, mobile phone locations and other surveillan­ce data. Once the system identifies a target, it could use population data from official sources to estimate the likelihood of civilian harm. But Lucy Suchman, professor of anthropolo­gy of science and technology at Britain’s Lancaster University, said the idea that more data would produce better targets was untrue. Algorithms are trained to find patterns in data that match a certain designatio­n — in the Gaza conflict, possibly “Hamas affiliate”, she said. Any pattern in the data matching a previously identified affiliate would generate a new target, but any “questionab­le assumption­s” would be amplified, Suchman explained. “In other words, more dubious data equals worse systems.”

Humans in control

The Zionist entity are not the first fighting force to deploy automated targeting on the battlefiel­d. As far back as the 1990-91 Gulf War, the US military worked on algorithms to improve targeting. For the 1999 Kosovo bombing campaign, NATO began using algorithms to calculate potential civilian casualties.

And the US military had hired secretive data firm Palantir to provide battlefiel­d analytics in Afghanista­n. Backers of the technology have repeatedly insisted it will reduce civilian deaths. But some military analysts are skeptical that the technology is advanced enough to be trusted. In a blog post for the British Royal United Services Institute defense think-tank, analyst Noah Sylvia said last month that humans would still need to cross-check every output. The Zionist military is “one of the most technologi­cally advanced and integrated militaries in the world”, he said. But “the odds of even the IDF using an AI with such a degree of sophistica­tion and autonomy are low”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait