by Haijun watcher » Sun Aug 15, 2021 12:31 am
National Interest
The Navy Is Testing the Boundaries of Automated Defense and Robot Warships
The sea-based military service is considering using autonomous drone weapons for non-lethal defensive attacks.
by Kris Osborn
As the Navy fast-tracks a massive new fleet of robot warships armed with missiles, sub-hunting sonar, air defense radar and extensive command-and-control systems, the military service is refining technical requirements and concepts of operations for the new fleet.
The Navy is trying to accelerate testing, prototyping, development and deployment of a new fleet of unmanned systems. This large undertaking encompasses its small, medium and large surface and undersea drones. These new weapons will perform a wide range of missions. They will operate independently but also work in coordination with one another through advanced algorithms, automation and even artificial-intelligence-enabled functionality. This is the premise of Ghost Fleet Overlord, a multiyear Office of Naval Research-inspired program to bring autonomy to new levels of maritime warfare capability.
Concurrently, the scope, scale and range of autonomous operations are increasing. Now, it includes semi-autonomous mine-hunting drones armed with explosives, independent navigation and data analysis, self-operating sonar and acoustic communications systems, and early experiments with arming unmanned systems with weapons. Of course, per the Department of Defense�s doctrine, humans will be �in the loop� when it comes to decisions about lethal force. But it�s notable that there have been increasing discussions about the merits of automating defensive, non-lethal weapons such as interceptors.
(...SNIPPED)
[url=https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/navy-testing-boundaries-automated-defense-and-robot-warships-191605]National Interest[/url]
[quote][b][size=200]The Navy Is Testing the Boundaries of Automated Defense and Robot Warships[/size][/b]
The sea-based military service is considering using autonomous drone weapons for non-lethal defensive attacks.
by Kris Osborn
As the Navy fast-tracks a massive new fleet of robot warships armed with missiles, sub-hunting sonar, air defense radar and extensive command-and-control systems, the military service is refining technical requirements and concepts of operations for the new fleet.
The Navy is trying to accelerate testing, prototyping, development and deployment of a new fleet of unmanned systems. This large undertaking encompasses its small, medium and large surface and undersea drones. These new weapons will perform a wide range of missions. They will operate independently but also work in coordination with one another through advanced algorithms, automation and even artificial-intelligence-enabled functionality. This is the premise of Ghost Fleet Overlord, a multiyear Office of Naval Research-inspired program to bring autonomy to new levels of maritime warfare capability.
Concurrently, the scope, scale and range of autonomous operations are increasing. Now, it includes semi-autonomous mine-hunting drones armed with explosives, independent navigation and data analysis, self-operating sonar and acoustic communications systems, and early experiments with arming unmanned systems with weapons. Of course, per the Department of Defense�s doctrine, humans will be �in the loop� when it comes to decisions about lethal force. But it�s notable that there have been increasing discussions about the merits of automating defensive, non-lethal weapons such as interceptors.
(...SNIPPED)[/quote]