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That doesn't seem to work for me. I get DNS resolution error there. I tried DNS lookup on nslookup.io but http://23.137.248.133/EO1O4 (Edit: revalidated, currently shows 1.1.1.7 but results in Error 1003 "Direct IP access not allowed") only gets me to "hello world" after completing Captcha..
Technology
Israel Quietly Embeds AI Systems in Deadly Military Operations
Selecting targets for air strikes and executing raids can now be conducted with unprecedented speed, according to army officials
By Marissa Newman
July 16, 2023 at 12:00 AM EDT
The Israel Defense Forces have started using artificial intelligence to select targets for air strikes and organize wartime logistics as tensions escalate in the occupied territories and with arch-rival Iran.
Though the military wonât comment on specific operations, officials say that it now uses an AI recommendation system that can crunch huge amounts of data to select targets for air strikes. Ensuing raids can then be rapidly assembled with another artificial intelligence model called Fire Factory, which uses data about military-approved targets to calculate munition loads, prioritize and assign thousands of targets to aircraft and drones, and propose a schedule.
While both systems are overseen by human operators who vet and approve individual targets and air raid plans, according to an IDF official, the technology is still not subject to any international or state-level regulation. Proponents argue that the advanced algorithms may surpass human capabilities and could help the military minimize casualties, while critics warn of the potentially deadly consequences of relying on increasingly autonomous systems.
âIf there is a mistake in the calculation of the AI, and if the AI is not explainable, then who do we blame for the mistake?â said Tal Mimran, a lecturer of international law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and former legal counsel for the army. âYou can wipe out an entire family based on a mistake.â
Israeli Air Strike In Gaza, Palestine
Israel's Iron Dome air defense system intercepts rockets launched from Gaza City, on May 10. The system, in service for over a decade, is an example of Israelâs early adoption of AI-based technologies in warfare.Photographer: Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto/Getty Images
Details of the armyâs operational use of AI remain largely classified, yet statements from military officials suggest that the IDF has gained battlefield experience with the controversial systems through periodic flareups in the Gaza Strip, where Israel frequently carries out air strikes in response to rocket attacks. In 2021, the IDF described the 11-day conflict in Gaza as the worldâs first âAI war,â citing its use of artificial intelligence to identify rocket launchpads and deploy drone swarms. Israel also conducts raids in Syria and Lebanon, targeting what it says are weapons shipments to Iran-backed militias like Hezbollah.
In recent months, Israel has been issuing near-daily warnings to Iran over its uranium enrichment, vowing it will not allow the country to obtain nuclear weapons under any circumstances. Should the two enter into a military confrontation, the IDF anticipates that Iranian proxies in Gaza, Syria and Lebanon would retaliate, setting the stage for the first serious multi-front conflict for Israel since a surprise attack by Egypt and Syria 50 years ago sparked the Yom Kippur War.
AI-based tools like Fire Factory are tailored for such a scenario, according to IDF officials. âWhat used to take hours now takes minutes, with a few more minutes for human review,â said Col. Uri, who heads the armyâs digital transformation unit and who spoke at the IDF headquarters in Tel Aviv on the condition that only his first name be used for security reasons. âWith the same amount of people, we do much more.â
The system, these officials stressed, is designed for all-out war.
Fire Factory softwareSource: Israel Defense Forces
Another worry is that the fast adoption of AI is outpacing research into its inner workings. Many algorithms are developed by private companies and militaries that do not disclose propriety information, and critics have underlined the built-in lack of transparency in how algorithms reach their conclusions. The IDF acknowledged the problem, but said output is carefully reviewed by soldiers and that its military AI systems leave behind technical breadcrumbs, giving human operators the ability to recreate their steps.
âSometimes when you introduce more complex AI components, neural networks and the like, understanding what âwent through its head,â figuratively speaking, is pretty complicated. And then sometimes Iâm willing to say Iâm satisfied with traceability, not explainability. That is, I want to understand what is critical for me to understand about the process and monitor it, even if I donât understand what every âneuronâ is doing,ââ said Uri.
The IDF declined to talk about facial recognition technology, which has been strongly criticized by human rights groups, although it did say it has refrained from integrating AI into recruitment software out of concern that it could discriminate against women and potential cadets from lower socioeconomic backgrounds.
The main advantage of integrating AI into battlefield systems, according to some experts, is the potential to reduce civilian casualties. âI think that thereâs an efficiency and effectiveness benefit to using these technologies correctly. And within good functioning technological parameters, there can be very, very high precision,â said Simona R. Soare, a research fellow at the London-based International Institute of Strategic Studies. âIt can help you with a lot of things that you need to do on the go, in the fog of battle. And that is very difficult to do on the best of days.â
âThere are also many things that can go wrong, too,â she added.
Ethical Concerns
While Israeli leaders have outlined their intention to make the country an âAI superpower,â theyâve been vague on the details. The Defense Ministry declined to comment on how much itâs invested in AI, and the army would not discuss specific defense contracts, though it did confirm that Fire Factory was developed by Israeli defense contractor Rafael. Further obscuring the picture is that, unlike during the nuclear arms race, when leaking details of weaponsâ capabilities was a key aspect of deterrence, autonomous and AI-assisted systems are being developed by governments, militaries, and private defense companies in secret.
âWe can assume that the Americans and even the Chinese and maybe several other countries have advanced systems in those fields as well,â said Liran Antebi, a senior researcher at the Israel-based Institute for National Security Studies. But unlike Israel, âthey have, as much as I know, never demonstrated operational use and success.â
For now, there arenât any limitations. Despite a decade of UN-sponsored talks, there is no international framework establishing who bears responsibility for civilian casualties, accidents or unintended escalations when a computer misjudges.
âThereâs also a question of testing and the data that these systems are trained on,â said Connolly from the Stop Killer Robots coalition. âHow precise and accurate can you know a system is going to be unless itâs already been trained and tested on people?â
Such concerns are why Mimran, the law lecturer at Hebrew University, believes that the IDF should exclusively use AI for defensive purposes. During his tenure in the army, Mimran manually vetted targets to make sure that attacks complied with international law. That taught him that, regardless of technology, âthere is a point where you need to make a value-based decision.â
âAnd for that,â he said, âwe cannot rely on AI.â