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auto-warrior....Hey, electric cars? It’s obvious that they’ve come into their own now that Tesla’s Elon Musk has once again been granted his (no, this is not a misprint!) $44.9 billion pay package by that company’s shareholders after a Delaware judge all too unreasonably tossed it out last year.
Admittedly, given court issues, he won’t get it immediately, but he’s still promised to continue helping make Tesla’s vehicles fully artificially intelligent and “self-driving.” And what could possibly go wrong, once AI is at the wheel instead of us humans? Tom Dispatch
William Hartung, An AI Hell on Earth? POSTED ON JUNE 25, 2024
I still recall my dad teaching me to drive in New York City. I can remember being at a corner downtown with cars zipping by in either direction and my dad yelling, “Turn left! Turn left!” In that moment of ultimate pressure, I simply couldn’t remember which direction left was. Had I then been artificially intelligent, there would have been no problem. Now, it seems, with future AI and billions of dollars more in the hands of Musk and his like, grammar school kids or even toddlers may someday be able to “drive” their artificially intelligent family cars. (Something to look forward to, right?) And the same, it seems, may be true when it comes to making war. Thanks in large part to the new-age militarists of Silicon Valley that TomDispatch regular and Pentagon expert William Hartung describes so vividly today, sooner or later, this country’s generals and admirals, fighting soldiers, sailors, and pilots will assumedly be replaced at the wheel of war by artificial intelligence. And what could possibly go wrong? I mean, isn’t war, like driving a car, potentially a matter of child’s play? And won’t AI ensure that war-making never again falters — no more Vietnams, Afghanistans, or Iraqs, thanks to us increasingly (in)human beings. On the other hand, I can imagine a few problems (as can Hartung). I mean, when you think about it, what has war ever had to do with intelligence? Tom Philosopher Kings or New-Age Militarists? Silicon Valley and the Rush Toward Automated Warfare
Venture capital and military startup firms in Silicon Valley have begun aggressively selling a version of automated warfare that will deeply incorporate artificial intelligence (AI). Those companies and their CEOs are now pressing full speed ahead with that emerging technology, largely dismissing the risk of malfunctions that could lead to the future slaughter of civilians, not to speak of the possibility of dangerous scenarios of escalation between major military powers. The reasons for this headlong rush include a misplaced faith in “miracle weapons,” but above all else, this surge of support for emerging military technologies is driven by the ultimate rationale of the military-industrial complex: vast sums of money to be made.
The New Techno-Enthusiasts While some in the military and the Pentagon are indeed concerned about the future risk of AI weaponry, the leadership of the Defense Department is on board fully. Its energetic commitment to emerging technology was first broadcast to the world in an August 2023 speech delivered by Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks to the National Defense Industrial Association, the largest arms industry trade group in the country. She used the occasion to announce what she termed “the Replicator Initiative,” an umbrella effort to help create “a new state of the art — just as America has before — leveraging attritable, autonomous systems in all domains — which are less expensive, put fewer people in the line of fire, and can be changed, updated, or improved with substantially shorter lead times.” Hicks was anything but shy about pointing to the primary rationale for such a rush toward robotic warfare: outpacing and intimidating China. “We must,” she said, “ensure the PRC [People’s Republic of China] leadership wakes up every day, considers the risks of aggression, and concludes, ‘today is not the day’ — and not just today, but every day, between now and 2027, now and 2035, now and 2049, and beyond.” Hick’s supreme confidence in the ability of the Pentagon and American arms makers to wage future techno-wars has been reinforced by a group of new-age militarists in Silicon Valley and beyond, spearheaded by corporate leaders like Peter Thiel of Palantir, Palmer Luckey of Anduril, and venture capitalists like Marc Andreessen of Andreessen Horowitz. Patriots or Profiteers? These corporate promoters of a new way of war also view themselves as a new breed of patriots, ready and able to successfully confront the military challenges of the future. A case in point is “Rebooting the Arsenal of Democracy,” a lengthy manifesto on Anduril’s blog. It touts the superiority of Silicon Valley startups over old-school military-industrial behemoths like Lockheed Martin in supplying the technology needed to win the wars of the future: “The largest defense contractors are staffed with patriots who, nevertheless, do not have the software expertise or business model to build the technology we need… These companies built the tools that kept us safe in the past, but they are not the future of defense.” In contrast to the industrial-age approach it critiques, Luckey and his compatriots at Anduril seek an entirely new way of developing and selling weapons: “Software will change how war is waged. The battlefield of the future will teem with artificially intelligent, unmanned systems, which fight, gather reconnaissance data, and communicate at breathtaking speeds.” At first glance, Luckey seems a distinctly unlikely candidate to have risen so far in the ranks of arms industry executives. He made his initial fortune by creating the Oculus virtual reality device, a novelty item that users can strap to their heads to experience a variety of 3-D scenes (with the sensation that they’re embedded in them). His sartorial tastes run toward sandals and Hawaiian shirts, but he has now fully shifted into military work. In 2017, he founded Anduril, in part with support from Peter Thiel and his investment firm, Founders Fund. Anduril currently makes autonomous drones, automated command and control systems, and other devices meant to accelerate the speed at which military personnel can identify and destroy targets. Thiel, a mentor to Palmer Luckey, offers an example of how the leaders of the new weapons startup firms differ from the titans of the Cold War era. As a start, he’s all in for Donald Trump. Once upon a time, the heads of major weapons makers like Lockheed Martin tried to keep good ties with both Democrats and Republicans, making substantial campaign contributions to both parties and their candidates and hiring lobbyists with connections on both sides of the aisle. The logic for doing so couldn’t have seemed clearer then. They wanted to cement a bipartisan consensus for spending ever more on the Pentagon, one of the few things most key members of both parties agreed upon. And they also wanted to have particularly good relations with whichever party controlled the White House and/or the Congress at any moment. The Silicon Valley upstarts and their representatives are also much more vocal in their criticisms of China. They are the coldest (or do I mean hottest?) of the new cold warriors in Washington, employing harsher rhetoric than either the Pentagon or the big contractors. By contrast, the big contractors generally launder their critiques of China and support for wars around the world that have helped pad their bottom lines through think tanks, which they’ve funded to the tune of tens of millions of dollars annually. Thiel’s main company, Palantir, has also been criticized for providing systems that have enabled harsh border crackdowns by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) as well as “predictive policing.” That (you won’t be surprised to learn) involves the collection of vast amounts of personal data without a warrant, relying on algorithms with built-in racial biases that lead to the systematic unfair targeting and treatment of people of color. To fully grasp how the Silicon Valley militarists view next-generation warfare, you need to check out the work of Christian Brose, Palantir’s chief strategy officer. He was a long-time military reformer and former aide to the late Senator John McCain. His book Kill Chain serves as a bible of sorts for advocates of automated warfare. Its key observation: that the winner in combat is the side that can most effectively shorten the “kill chain” (the time between when a target is identified and destroyed). His book assumes that the most likely adversary in the next tech war will indeed be China and he proceeds to exaggerate Beijing’s military capabilities, while overstating its military ambitions and insisting that outpacing that country in developing emerging military technologies is the only path to future victory. And mind you, Brose’s vision of shortening that kill chain poses immense risks. As the time to decide what actions to take diminishes, the temptation to take humans “out of the loop” will only grow, leaving life-and-death decisions to machines with no moral compass and vulnerable to catastrophic malfunctions of a sort inherent in any complex software system. Much of Brose’s critique of the current military-industrial complex rings true. A few big firms are getting rich making ever more vulnerable huge weapons platforms like aircraft carriers and tanks, while the Pentagon spends billions on a vast, costly global basing network that could be replaced with a far smaller, more dispersed military footprint. Sadly, though, his alternative vision poses more problems than it solves. First, there’s no guarantee that the software-driven systems promoted by Silicon Valley will work as advertised. After all, there’s a long history of “miracle weapons” that failed, from the electronic battlefield in Vietnam to President Ronald Reagan’s disastrous Star Wars missile shield. Even when the ability to find and destroy targets more quickly did indeed improve, wars like those in Iraq and Afghanistan, fought using those very technologies, were dismal failures. A recent Wall Street Journal investigation suggests that the new generation of military tech is being oversold as well. The Journal found that small top-of-the-line new U.S. drones supplied to Ukraine for its defensive war against Russia have proved far too “glitchy and expensive,” so much so that, irony of ironies, the Ukrainians have opted to buy cheaper, more reliable Chinese drones instead. Finally, the approach advocated by Brose and his acolytes is going to make war more likely as technological hubris instills a belief that the United States can indeed “beat” a rival nuclear-armed power like China in a conflict, if only we invest in a nimble new high-tech force. The result, as my colleague Michael Brenes and I pointed out recently, is the untold billions of dollars of private money now pouring into firms seeking to expand the frontiers of techno-war. Estimates range from $6 billion to $33 billion annually and, according to the New York Times, $125 billion over the past four years. Whatever the numbers, the tech sector and its financial backers sense that there are massive amounts of money to be made in next-generation weaponry and aren’t about to let anyone stand in their way. Meanwhile, an investigation by Eric Lipton of the New York Times found that venture capitalists and startup firms already pushing the pace on AI-driven warfare are also busily hiring ex-military and Pentagon officials to do their bidding. High on that list is former Trump Secretary of Defense Mark Esper. Such connections may be driven by patriotic fervor, but a more likely motivation is simply the desire to get rich. As Ellen Lord, former head of acquisition at the Pentagon, noted, “There’s panache now with the ties between the defense community and private equity. But they are also hoping they can cash in big-time and make a ton of money.” Another central figure in the move toward building a high-tech war machine is former Google CEO Eric Schmidt. His interests go far beyond the military sphere. He’s become a virtual philosopher king when it comes to how new technology will reshape society and, indeed, what it means to be human. He’s been thinking about such issues for some time and laid out his views in a 2021 book modestly entitled The Age of AI and Our Human Future, coauthored with none other than the late Henry Kissinger. Schmidt is aware of the potential perils of AI, but he’s also at the center of efforts to promote its military applications. Though he forgoes the messianic approach of some up-and-coming Silicon Valley figures, whether his seemingly more thoughtful approach will contribute to the development of a safer, more sensible world of AI weaponry is open to debate. Let’s start with the most basic thing of all: the degree to which Schmidt thinks that AI will change life as we know it is extraordinary. In that book of his and Kissinger’s, they asserted that it would spark “the alteration of human identity and the human experience at levels not seen since the dawn of the modern age,” arguing that AI’s “functioning portends progress toward the essence of things, progress that philosophers, theologians and scientists have sought, with partial success, for millennia.” On the other hand, the government panel on artificial intelligence on which Schmidt served fully acknowledged the risks posed by the military uses of AI. The question remains: Will he, at least, support strong safeguards against its misuse? During his tenure as head of the Pentagon’s Defense Innovation Board from 2017 to 2020, he did help set the stage for Pentagon guidelines on the use of AI that promised humans would always “be in the loop” in launching next-gen weapons. But as a tech industry critic noted, once the rhetoric is stripped away, the guidelines “don’t really prevent you from doing anything.” In fact, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and other good government advocates questioned whether Schmidt’s role as head of the Defense Innovation Unit didn’t represent a potential conflict of interest. After all, while he was helping shape its guidelines on the military applications of AI, he was also investing in firms that stood to profit from its development and use. His investment entity, America’s Frontier Fund, regularly puts money in military tech startups, and a nonprofit he founded, the Special Competitive Studies Project, describes its mission as to “strengthen America’s long-term competitiveness as artificial intelligence (AI) [reshapes] our national security, economy, and society.” The group is connected to a who’s who of leaders in the military and the tech industry and is pushing, among other things, for less regulation over military-tech development. In 2023, Schmidt even founded a military drone company, White Stork, which, according to Forbes, has been secretly testing its systems in the Silicon Valley suburb of Menlo Park. The question now is whether Schmidt can be persuaded to use his considerable influence to rein in the most dangerous uses of AI. Unfortunately, his enthusiasm for using it to enhance warfighting capabilities suggests otherwise: “Every once in a while, a new weapon, a new technology comes along that changes things. Einstein wrote a letter to Roosevelt in the 1930s saying that there is this new technology — nuclear weapons — that could change war, which it clearly did. I would argue that [AI-powered] autonomy and decentralized, distributed systems are that powerful.” Given the risks already cited, comparing militarized AI to the development of nuclear weapons shouldn’t exactly be reassuring. The combination of the two — nuclear weapons controlled by automatic systems with no human intervention — has so far been ruled out, but don’t count on that lasting. It’s still a possibility, absent strong, enforceable safeguards on when and how AI can be used. AI is coming, and its impact on our lives, whether in war or peace, is likely to stagger the imagination. In that context, one thing is clear: we can’t afford to let the people and companies that will profit most from its unbridled application have the upper hand in making the rules for how it should be used. Isn’t it time to take on the new-age warriors? https://tomdispatch.com/philosopher-kings-or-new-age-militarists/
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война и мир.....
Sergey Ishchenko
Russia prepares to hide a deadly container for the United States at the bottom of the ocean before the command “fire!”
Russia has announced the development of a new type of underwater-launched nuclear weapons system, stored in containers on the seabed. This system is designed to remain undetectable until activated. The containers can be prepositioned in strategic locations on the ocean floor, providing Russia with a significant strategic advantage by allowing it to launch nuclear strikes from undetectable, concealed positions.
This development is seen as a response to the growing threat from NATO and other Western military alliances.
The system design aims to ensure survivability even if Russian ground-based nuclear forces are compromised in a conflict. The move marks a significant shift in Russian nuclear strategy, emphasizing stealth and surprise.
The containers would be equipped with autonomous systems capable of detecting and responding to threats, ensuring that they are not easily neutralized. This capability increases the unpredictability of Russia's nuclear response options, complicating any potential adversary's defense planning.
Navy Day, which was celebrated with fireworks on the last Sunday in July, was the perfect time for the president Vladimir Putin. Not only to once again express words of gratitude to our Navy sailors for their loyal service to the country. The head of state also took advantage of the celebration to issue new, very clear warnings to an increasingly insolent West.
However, it was done, in a half-threatening way. Many intelligence services around the world are probably wondering about this now. Let's try to join this process.
Let me remind you what Putin specifically said on that day in July. Here is a quote: “It is worth noting the statement of the American administration and the German government on the plan to deploy American long-range and high-precision missile systems on the territory of the FRG from 2026. Within its range will be important installations of the Russian state and military administration, our administrative and industrial centers and our defense infrastructure. And the flight time to targets on our territory for such missiles, which in the future may be equipped with nuclear warheads, will be about ten minutes. The United States has already transferred missile systems from its territory to Denmark and the Philippines during exercises».
But, undoubtedly, the most important thing for us concerns Russia's possible military-technical measures in response to this creeping aggression from the Western side. But here Putin spoke extremely vaguely. Leaving Russia's adversaries with a vast scope for the most alarming suppositions.
Another quote from our president’s speech: “This situation is reminiscent of the events of the Cold War, associated with the deployment of American medium-range Pershing missiles in Europe.
If the United States implements such plans, we will consider ourselves free from the previously assumed unilateral moratorium on the deployment of medium- and short-range strike weapons, including increasing the capabilities of our Navy's coastal forces.
Currently, the development of a whole series of such systems is in the final stages. We will take mirror measures for their deployment, taking into account the actions of the United States and its satellites in Europe and other regions of the world».
In my opinion, the thesis on “increasing the capabilities of our navy's coastal forces» seemed particularly mysterious in the context of the possible lifting of the Russian moratorium on the deployment of medium- and short-range nuclear weapons.
What could this mean? That certain land-based missiles, still under development in Russia, will soon appear in our Black Sea, Northern and Baltic fleets? But what important could they add to the context of high-precision Kalibr, Oniks, hypersonic Tsirkon and similar missiles, which our admirals have had for a long time and which are far superior to their Western counterparts?
However, before trying to formulate hypotheses, for the sake of completeness, let us recall the times of the Cold War and the situation of the American Pershings in Europe, since the president considered it necessary to mention them.
For those who have forgotten something: the first Pershing-2 battery appeared in West Germany in December 1983. We responded by deploying similar weapons of mass destruction in the European part of the USSR, in Siberia and in Chukotka – RSD-10 Pioneer ballistic missiles, better known in the West as the nightmare SS-20. With the flight time to the European capitals of the main NATO countries and American military bases in the Old World, as well as in Alaska, you will not have time to recite the “Our Father”.
This deprived almost the entire NATO of a good night's sleep for years. All except the United States launched this military-political “bayga” in Western Europe. States, not without reason, expected to stay beyond the Atlantic Ocean in the event of reprisals.
The reality of these Washington plans was the weakest point in our complex of countermeasures to the deployment of the American Pershing-2 under the very nose of the Soviet Union. Our RSD-10s were not capable of targeting anything on US territory except polar Alaska.
Moscow had to rely only on Soviet intercontinental ballistic missiles, strategic aviation and the few multi-purpose nuclear submarines equipped with long-range cruise missiles then available.
Covert combat patrol areas have even been expanded to the Caribbean Sea and the Hawaiian Islands.
And all this with one goal: to minimize the flight time of Soviet missiles at the American limits. In order at least to try to put them in the same conditions as those in which the USSR found itself after the deployment of the Pershings in West Germany.
This continued until December 1987, when the USSR and the United States signed the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty. According to this, all medium-range (1000 to 5500 km) and short-range (500 to 1000 km) missiles were to be eliminated.
Today, it is very likely that the spiral of history will enter a qualitatively new turn in military-technical terms. The Americans are once again determined to place their missile “gun” as close as possible to the Russian temple in 2026.
What will our reaction be?
Are we going to send multipurpose nuclear submarines with long-range cruise missiles somewhere like the Gulf of Mexico again? Will we make more regular flights of our nuclear warhead-equipped “strategic aircraft” along the United States’ own air borders?
Moscow is also likely considering these options. But what do the coastal troops of the Russian Navy have to do with such a matter, which Putin clearly mentioned at the main naval parade-2024 for good reason? How could they pose a threat to various objects on American territory? If, of course, we leave aside their almost deserted Alaska next to our Chukotka?
Naturally, without having classified information of national importance, it is impossible to answer such a question with certainty. However, based on open sources, some assumptions seem logical.
Does the Russian Navy, in addition to nuclear submarines, have at least theoretical capabilities to secretly, but point-blank, bring its strategic weapons closer to the borders of the United States? At least as close as, say, our Smolensk or Voronezh are to the same Dresden or Berlin?
If you think about it, the chances have been there for a long time. And each of them is called “Skif”. This is a joint development of the Central Marine Engineering Design Bureau “Rubin” and the State Research Center “Miass”.
It is our new ballistic missile with nuclear or conventional “filling”, capable of remaining stationary for years in standby mode on the sea or at the bottom of the oceans. And at the right moment, on command, suddenly shoot underwater and hit enemy land and sea targets with high accuracy.
At the same time, as far as we can judge, it is practically impossible for the enemy to detect in advance the very moment of installation of this weapon in the launching position. Since the release of a single container with the “Skif” anywhere (let's say – far from areas with heavy shipping) is carried out in an underwater position from a torpedo tube of a submarine.
The process appears schematically ingeniously simple and rational. Namely: the carrier boat approaches a given point underwater. And at a great depth, while moving, he drops the container with the missile. No assembly work is required, the container simply falls to the bottom. At the same time, even in the worst case for us, the enemy will not be able to destroy it with the help of, for example, deep-sea divers. The depth of the “Skif” may be too great to carry out such tasks.
But what next? In the most terrible hours, the complex is activated through a communications center with nuclear submarines in combat patrol zones. A signal from a command post, which may be hundreds or even thousands of kilometers from where the Skif was sunk.
The command post is crewed by officers from the Coastal Missile and Artillery Troops (BRAV) of the Russian Navy. And then, you will agree, Putin's seemingly unexpected mention of these troops during the main naval parade-2024 in connection with Moscow's possible response to the imminent deployment of the latest American missile weapons in Germany becomes quite understandable.
When the launch order is received, the container takes a vertical position thanks to the partial blowing of the compressed air bottles. After which the blowing continues and the “Skif” begins to float.
They claim the missile is ejected from the container using a solid fuel propellant at depths of up to 50 meters. That is to say exactly the same thing as that carried out from the silos of strategic nuclear submarines.
According to reports in the public press, Russia conducted the first tests of the Skifs in the White Sea in 2008. Based on their results, in 2009 the prototypes were sent for overhaul. And in 2013, the missile was transferred for state testing.
There is reason to believe that the crew of the unique Russian experimental diesel-electric submarine B-90 Sarov (project 20120) took an active part in the practical development of the Skif. He is assigned to the top-secret Main Directorate of Deep Sea Research (GUGI) of the Russian Navy. Which, as officially stated, is engaged in deep-sea and oceanographic research, search and rescue of sunken ships, physiological research on the effects of great depths on the human body and testing of emergency rescue equipment .
What is the current state of our “Skifs”? And how many of them are available?
It is clear that this information is stored in thick safes under the heading “Top Secret”. The only "leak" on this, and most likely, sanctioned one, took place on November 21, 2017. It was then that the head of the Defense and Security Committee of the Federation Council, former commander Chief of the Aerospace Forces, Colonel General Viktor Bondarev said that Skif bottom-mounted missiles are already in the arsenal of the Russian armed forces.
This statement was made while presenting to journalists the state arms program for 2018-2025, ready for approval by Vladimir Putin.
«Today we have in our arsenal unique strategic bombers (Tu-160), OTRKs with powerful ballistic and cruise missiles (Iskander family), Sarmat missile system, S-400 air defense systems, intercontinental ballistic missiles, nuclear missile cruisers equipped with powerful anti-missiles, Tsirkon hypersonic missiles and Skif missiles launched from the seabed“, Bondarev said that day.
And one more thing. Many point out that there are internationally recognized legal barriers to the use of Skifs according to the above scheme. More specifically, the Treaty on the Prohibition of the Placement on the Seabed and Subsoil of Nuclear Weapons and Other Types of Weapons of Mass Destruction, approved by Assembly Resolution No. 2660 General Assembly of the United Nations of December 7, 1970.
Yes, and the provisions of this treaty were subsequently confirmed by all Soviet-American START agreements. But where are these agreements now? Washington effectively threw them in the “trash.” Just like the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty of 1987, which we have already mentioned. And soon the Americans opened another “Pandora's box”, planning to deploy their new missiles in Germany in 2026 to replace the Pershing-2, long written off in the archives. Once again with Russia in the crosshairs.
So why, in the face of this ongoing military-political perfidy, should we adhere to long-standing agreements from the same restrictive series? Prevent our effective retaliatory measures against the territory of the United States itself?
No ! In war, as in war.
source: The Intel Drop via The People's Cause
https://en.reseauinternational.net/poutine-nous-avons-des-armes-nucleaires-sur-les-fonds-marins-a-quelques-secondes-des-plus-grandes-villes-americaines/
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.