U.S., China, other nations urge 'responsible' use of military AI
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[February 17, 2023]
By Toby Sterling
THE HAGUE (Reuters) - More than 60 countries including the U.S. and
China signed a modest "call to action" on Thursday endorsing the
responsible use of artificial intelligence (AI) in the military.
Human rights experts and academics noted the statement was not legally
binding and failed to address concerns like AI-guided drones, 'slaughterbots'
that could kill with no human intervention, or the risk that an AI could
escalate a military conflict.
However, the statement was a tangible outcome of the first international
summit on military AI, co-hosted by the Netherlands and South Korea this
week at The Hague.
Signatories said they were committed to developing and using military AI
in accordance with "international legal obligations and in a way that
does not undermine international security, stability and
accountability."
The conference comes as interest in AI is at all-time highs thanks to
the launch of OpenAI's ChatGPT program and as Ukraine has made use of
facial recognition and AI-assisted targeting systems in its fight with
Russia.
Organizers did not invite Russia following its 2022 invasion of Ukraine,
which Moscow calls a "special military operation." Ukraine did not
attend.
Israel participated in the conference but did not sign the statement.
U.S. Under Secretary of State for Arms Control Bonnie Jenkins put
forward a U.S. framework for responsible military AI use.
The U.S. and other powerful countries have been reluctant to agree to
any legal limitations on using AI, for fear that doing so might put them
at a disadvantage to rivals.
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Representatives from more than 60
countries pose after attending the first international summit on
responsible use of artificial intelligence (AI) in the military, in
The Hague, Netherlands, February 16, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Sterling
"We want to emphasize that we are open to engagement with any
country that is interested in joining us," Jenkins said.
The U.S. proposal said AI-weapons systems should involve
"appropriate levels of human judgment", in line with updated
guidelines on lethal autonomous weapons issued by the Department of
Defense last month.
Human Rights Watch challenged the U.S. to define "appropriate", and
not to "tinker with political declarations" but to begin negotiating
internationally binding law.
China representative Jian Tan told the summit that countries should
"oppose seeking absolute military advantage and hegemony through AI"
and work through the United Nations.
Jessica Dorsey, assistant professor of international law at Utrecht
University, said the U.S. proposal was a "missed opportunity" for
leadership and the summit statement was too weak.
"It paves the path for states to develop AI for military purposes in
any way they see fit as long as they can say it is 'responsible',"
she said. "Where is the enforcement mechanism?"
(Reporting by Toby Sterling; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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