
5 ways AI is leveling the battlefield
Fox News
Although a Terminator-like hellscape is not on the horizon, military applications of AI are likely to make warfare more lethal, more intense – and more competitive.
Bryan Clark, a former Navy submariner, is a senior fellow and director at the Center for Defense Concepts and Technology at the Hudson Institute. He’s an expert in naval operations, electronic warfare, autonomous systems, military competitions and wargaming.
Decision-making: Generative AI tools like ChatGPT, Bard or Midjourney use internet data to train a model so it can predict how to complete tasks like writing a line of computer code or creating a new painting in Picasso’s style. These same AI techniques can also help military commanders formulate plans.
Normally, legions of planners think through each aspect of an operation, from food and fuel to missile attacks, and build courses of action for a commander to consider. Trained with data from past operations, the characteristics of the force, and estimates about the enemy, generative AI models can create plans that – although not perfect – give planners a head start. And because an AI tool can think through more options than a staff of humans, it can reveal alternatives human planners may not have considered.

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