The Denver Post

Military’s plan to save lives: Building driverless vehicles

- By Peter Holley

Self-driving cars are synonymous with Silicon Valley and Detroit, with companies such as General Motors, Waymo, Uber and Ford racing to perfect driverless transporta­tion.

But the military is pushing to make this technology an important priority as well.

Finding new ways to lower the risk soldiers face from hostile actors - an effort known as force protection - has become a top priority for various branches of the military after sustained conflicts in Iraq and Afghanista­n, according to Karlyn Stanley, a senior researcher at the Rand Corporatio­n who studies autonomous vehicle technology.

Unlike the commercial sector, the military is primarily interested in using autonomous technology to save lives, she said.

During the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n, American troops found themselves under regular assault from improvised explosive devices that targeted supply convoys and military patrols, killing and wounding thousands.

According to a USA Today analysis in 2013:

“The IED has given rise to a multibilli­on-dollar industry in vehicle and body armor, robots, ground-penetratin­g radar, surveillan­ce, electrical jamming, counterint­elligence, computer analysis and computeriz­ed prostheses.

“The Government Accountabi­lity Office says it’s impossible to estimate the total U.S. cost of fighting the bombs over two wars. But the Pentagon has spent at least $75 billion on armored vehicles and tools for defeating the weapons.”

One of the major advantages of autonomous vehicles, according to military experts, is their ability to remove people from unnecessar­ily risky situations.

“You’re in a very vulnerable position when you’re doing that kind of activity,” Michael Griffin, the undersecre­tary of defense for research and engineerin­g, said during hearing on Capitol Hill this month, according to Bloomberg. “If that can be done by an automated unmanned vehicle with a relatively simple AI driving algorithm where I don’t have to worry about pedestrian­s and road signs and all of that, why wouldn’t I do that?”

Military engineers are closely monitoring autonomous technology in Silicon Valley and Detroit, Stanley said. They remain open to retrofitti­ng their vehicles with existing commercial technology instead of expending “precious resources” to create new types of sensors like LIDAR, a technology that allows a driverless car to navigate by using a pulsed laser to measure the distance between objects.

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