Chattanooga Times Free Press

Israel deploys remote-controlled robotic guns in West Bank

- BY SAM MCNEIL

AL-AROUB REFUGEE CAMP, West Bank — In two volatile spots in the occupied West Bank, Israel has installed robotic weapons that can fire tear gas, stun grenades and sponge-tipped bullets at Palestinia­n protesters.

The weapons, perched over a crowded Palestinia­n refugee camp and in a flashpoint West Bank city, use artificial intelligen­ce to track targets. Israel says the technology saves lives — both Israeli and Palestinia­n. But critics see another step toward a dystopian reality in which Israel fine-tunes its open-ended occupation of the Palestinia­ns while keeping its soldiers out of harm’s way.

The new weapon comes at a time of heightened tensions in the occupied West Bank, where unrest has risen sharply during what has been the deadliest year since 2006. The victory by former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s hard-line alliance, which includes an extreme right-wing party with close ties to the settler movement, has raised concerns of more violence.

REMOTE CONTROL

Twin turrets, each equipped with a watchful lens and a gun barrel, were recently installed atop a guard tower bristling with surveillan­ce cameras overlookin­g the Al-Aroub refugee camp in the southern West Bank. When young Palestinia­n protesters pour into the streets hurling stones and firebombs at Israeli soldiers, the robotic weapons unleash tear gas or sponge-tipped bullets on them, witnesses say.

There are no soldiers next to the machines. Instead, the weapons are operated by remote control. At a touch of a button, soldiers nestled inside a guard tower can fire at selected targets.

The army says the system is being tested at this stage and fires only “non-lethal” weapons used for crowd control, such as sponge-tipped bullets and tear gas. Residents of Al-Aroub say the turrets have repeatedly drenched the hillside camp in gas.

“We don’t open the window, we don’t open the door. We know not to open anything,” said shopkeeper Hussein al-Muzyeen.

Robotic weapons are increasing­ly in operation around the world, with militaries expanding their use of drones to carry out lethal strikes from Ukraine to Ethiopia. Remote-controlled guns like the Israeli system in the West Bank have been used by the United States in Iraq, by South Korea along the border with North Korea, and by various Syrian rebel groups.

“Israel is using technology as a means to control the civil population,” said Dror Sadot, spokeswoma­n for Israeli rights group B’Tselem. She said that even supposedly nonlethal weapons like sponge bullets can cause extreme pain and even be deadly.

SMART SHOOTER

The turrets in Al-Aroub were built by Smart Shooter, a company that makes “fire control systems” that it says “significan­tly increase the accuracy, lethality, and situationa­l awareness of small arms.” The company boasts contracts with dozens of militaries around the world, including the U.S. Army.

Speaking at the company’s headquarte­rs in Kibbutz Yagur in northern Israel, Chief Executive Michal Mor said the gun requires human selection of targets and munitions.

“They always have a man in the loop making the decision regarding the legitimate target,” she said.

She said the system minimizes casualties by distancing soldiers from violence and limits collateral damage by making shots more accurate.

In a densely populated area like Al-Aroub, she said soldiers can monitor specific people in a crowd and lock the turret onto specific body parts. The system fires only after algorithms assess complex factors like wind speed, distance, and velocity.

The military said such safeguards minimize the risk to soldiers and improve supervisio­n over their activities. It also said the technology allows soldiers to target “less sensitive” areas of the body to minimize harm and avoid shooting bystanders.

“In this way, the system reduces the likelihood of inaccurate fire,” it said.

But Omar Shakir, the Israel and Palestine Director at Human Rights Watch, said Israel is on a “slide toward the digital dehumaniza­tion of weapons systems.” By using such technologi­es, Shakir said Israel is creating “a powder keg for human rights abuse.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/MAHMOUD ILLEAN ?? Two robotic guns are mounted on a guard tower bristling with surveillan­ce cameras pointed at the Aroub refugee camp Thursday in the West Bank.
AP PHOTO/MAHMOUD ILLEAN Two robotic guns are mounted on a guard tower bristling with surveillan­ce cameras pointed at the Aroub refugee camp Thursday in the West Bank.

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