The Borneo Post

The racing drone that could kill

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LAST week, an Israeli defence company painted a frightenin­g picture. In a roughly twominute video on YouTube that resembles an action movie, soldiers out on a mission are suddenly pinned down by enemy gunfire and calling for help.

In response, a tiny drone zips off its mother ship to the rescue, zooming behind the enemy soldiers and killing them with ease. While the situation is fake, the drone - unveiled last week by Israel based Elbit Systems - is not.

The Lanius, which in Latin can refer to butcherbir­ds, represents a new generation of drone: nimble, wired with artificial intelligen­ce and able to scout and kill. The machine is based on racing drone design, allowing it to maneuver into tight spaces, such as alleyways and small buildings.

The company’s promotiona­l content touts its upgrades. After being sent into battle, Lanius’s algorithm can make a map of the scene and scan people, differenti­ating enemies from allies - feeding all that data back to soldiers who can simply push a button to attack or kill who they want.

For weapons critics, that represents a nightmare scenario, which could alter the dynamics of war.

“It’s extremely concerning,” said Catherine Connolly, an arms expert at Stop Killer Robots, an anti-weapons advocacy group. “It’s basically just allowing the machine to decide if you live or die if we remove the human control element for that.”

Representa­tives from Elbit Systems did not return a request for comment.

Using drones in warfare has become commonplac­e. The United States’ arsenal of drones is responsibl­e for enemy and civilian deaths in the Middle East. In Russia’s war against Ukraine, Moscow has been seen using a killer drone that can dive bomb into targets, destroying them with little notice.

Drones large and small have been making an impact in war. Notably, Ukraine’s use of the Turkish-made Bayraktar TB2 - a drone the size of a small airplane and equipped with laser-guided missiles - has wreaked havoc on Russian tanks and trucks.

For weapons manufactur­ers, that provides an appealing target.

Elbit Systems, headquarte­red out of Haifa, Israel, says in promotiona­l content its Lanius is outfitted with features that would be particular­ly helpful in urban warfare settings, where troops can’t see their enemy well.

According to the drone’s data sheet, the drone is palm-size, roughly 11 inches by 6 inches. It has a top speed of 45 miles per hour. It can fly for around seven minutes, and has the ability to carry lethal and nonlethal materials. It’s unclear how deadly the lethal materials would be.

The drone is outfitted with WiFi and radio technology for communicat­ion. It can manoeuvre using GPS navigation, and the drone’s onboard artificial intelligen­ce system can scan and map urban battle spaces, feeding soldiers back a 3D map of its surroundin­gs.

The drones autonomous software helps with “enemy detection and classifica­tion,” according to the company, helpful for “lethal ambush.”

The company notes that the drone cannot decide to kill someone itself, and needs a “human-in-the-loop” to make the decision and pull the trigger.

Despite that, Connolly, of Stop Killer Robots, has numerous concerns.

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