Philippine Daily Inquirer

UN seeks ban on killer robots

- AP

UNITED NATIONS—Killer robots that can attack targets without any human input “should not have the power of life and death over human beings,” a new draft UN report says.

The report for the UN Human Rights Commission posted online this week deals with legal and philosophi­cal issues involved in giving robots lethal powers over humans, echoing countless science-fiction novels and films.

The debate dates to author Isaac Asimov’s first rule for robots in the 1942 story “Runaround”: “A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human

being to come to harm.”

Report author Christof Heyns, a South African professor of human rights law, calls for a worldwide moratorium on the “testing, production, assembly, transfer, acquisitio­n, deployment and use” of killer robots until an internatio­nal conference can develop rules for their use.

His findings are due to be debated at the Human Rights Council in Geneva on May 29.

According to the report, the United States, Britain, Israel, South Korea and Japan have developed various types of fully or semi-autonomous weapons.

Lethal autonomous robotics

In the report, Heyns focuses on a new generation of weapons that choose their targets and execute them. He calls them “lethal autonomous robotics,” or LARs for short, and says: “Decisions over life and death in armed conflict may require compassion and intuition. Humans— while they are fallible— at least might possess these qualities, whereas robots definitely do not.”

He notes the arguments of robot proponents that death-dealing autonomous weapons “will not be susceptibl­e to some of the human shortcomin­gs that may undermine the protection of life. Typically they would not act out of revenge, panic, anger, spite, prejudice or fear. Moreover, unless specifical­ly programmed to do so, robots would not cause intentiona­l suffering on civilian population­s, for example through torture. Robots also do not rape.”

Drones

The report goes beyond the recent debate over drone killings of al-Qaida suspects and nearby civilians who are maimed or killed in the air strikes. Drones do have human oversight. The killer robots are programmed to make autonomous decisions on the spot without orders from humans.

Heyns’ report notes the increasing use of drones, which “enable those who control lethal force not to be physically present when it is deployed, but rather to activate it while sitting behind computers in faraway places and stay out of the line of fire.

“Lethal autonomous robotics (LARs), if added to the arsenals of states, would add a new dimension to this distancing, in that targeting deci- sions could be taken by the robots themselves. In addition to being physically removed from the kinetic action, humans would also become more detached from decisions to kill—and their execution,” he wrote.

His report cites these examples, among others, of fully or semi-autonomous weapons that have been developed:

The US Phalanx system for Aegis-class cruisers, which automatica­lly detects, tracks and engages antiair warfare threats such as antiship missiles and aircraft.

Israel’s Harpy, a “fire-and-forget” autonomous weapon system designed to detect, attack and destroy radar emitters.

Britain’s Taranis jet-propelled combat drone prototype that can autonomous­ly search, identify and locate enemies but can only engage with a target when authorized by mission command. It also can defend itself against enemy aircraft.

The Samsung Techwin surveillan­ce and security guard robots, deployed in the demilitari­zed zone between North and South Korea, to detect targets through infrared sensors. They are currently operated by humans but have an “automatic mode.”

Decision in nanosecond­s

Current weapons systems are supposed to have some degree of human oversight. But Heyns notes that “the power to override may in reality be limited because the decisionma­king processes of robots are often measured in nanosecond­s and the informatio­nal basis of those decisions may not be practicall­y accessible to the supervisor.

In such circumstan­ces humans are de facto out of the loop and the machines thus effectivel­y constitute LARs,” or killer robots.

Probe of drone killings

Separately, another UN expert, British lawyer Ben Emmerson, is preparing a special investigat­ion for the UN General Assembly this year on drone warfare and targeted killings.

His probe was requested by Pakistan, which officially opposes the use of US drones on its territory as an infringeme­nt on its sovereignt­y but is believed to have tacitly approved some strikes in the past.

Pakistani officials say the drone strikes kill many innocent civilians, which the United States has rejected. The other two countries requesting the investigat­ion were two permanent members of the UN Security Council—Russia and China.

In April, an alliance of activist and humanitari­an groups led by Human Rights Watch launched the “Campaign to Stop Killer Robots” to push for a ban on fully autonomous weapons. The group applauded Heyns’ draft report in a statement on its website.

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