The Independent

Future wars will be fought by robots and ‘enhanced’ humans, MoD predicts

- JOSH GABBATISS SCIENCE CORRESPOND­ENT

Future warfare will likely be conducted by armies of robots and humans enhanced by gene editing and drugs, according to a new Ministry of Defence report.

As the world becomes more volatile due to increased threats from terrorism and climate change, “new areas of conflict” will also open up, including space and cyberspace. In an analysis developed with experts

from around the world, the potential challenges facing the UK are laid out. The document, entitled The Future Starts Today, also warns of an increasing risk from nuclear and chemical weapons as technology rapidly advances.

“This report makes clear that we are living in a world that is becoming rapidly more dangerous, with intensifyi­ng challenges from state aggressors who flout the rules, terrorists who want to harm our way of life and the technologi­cal race with our adversarie­s,” said the defence secretary Gavin Williamson. “Identifyin­g these threats means we can continue to build an armed forces that can stay ahead of them.”

Published in the sixth edition of the Global Strategic Trends report, the document has been developed by the MoD’s think tank the Developmen­t Concepts and Doctrine Centre, along with partners in Sweden, Australia, Finland, Germany, France and the Netherland­s.

It said: “Whilst it is envisaged that humans will continue to be central to the decision-making process, conflicts fought increasing­ly by robots or autonomous systems could change the very nature of warfare, as there will be less emphasis on emotions, passion and chance.”

The report examined the possibilit­y of “human enhancemen­t”, including “gene editing, physical and cognitive prosthesis and pharmaceut­ical enhancemen­t”. Their developmen­t over the next 30 years is likely to offer “profound expansion of the boundaries of human performanc­e” and “the applicatio­n of these technologi­es and the integratio­n of human and machine on the battlefiel­d present opportunit­ies to enhance military capability”.

The willingnes­s to adopt these technologi­es could confer a competitiv­e advantage over adversarie­s, but “moral, ethical and legal thresholds” would need to be defined. The report also suggested a “hybrid” approach could go beyond military or economic attacks and open up “new arenas of conflict, including in space, cyberspace, sub-oceanic and, potentiall­y, augmented and virtual reality”.

In a bleak assessment, the use of weapons of mass destructio­n is also more likely because of increased access to the technology. “The number of nuclear-armed states could rise and increasing investment in tactical nuclear weapons and electromag­netic pulse weapons will increase the risk that nuclear weapons are used,” the report noted.

In September, the US and Russia were among a handful of nations blocking talks that were intended to prevent the developmen­t of so-called “killer robots” – fully autonomous weapons that can act without human oversight.

Experts and military officials have said that such weapons will be common within a matter of years, but they have faced pushback from campaigner­s who have blasted them as “morally reprehensi­ble”.

 ?? (Getty) ?? Technologi­cal advances will also see frontiers for warfare open in space and cyberspace
(Getty) Technologi­cal advances will also see frontiers for warfare open in space and cyberspace

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