Pentagon uses AI to predict enemy moves ‘days in advance
The US military is testing an advanced
artificial intelligence (AI) system that it hopes can predict an enemy’s next
move days before it actually occurs.
Predicting the future is normally a
hopeless task, but advances in technology and the increasing shift to using AI
to assist decision-making have opened up possibilities for warfare that would
once have felt like science fiction.
The US defence department has created a new
acronym for the computerised crystal ball-gazing: GIDE, or global information
dominance experiments.
The aim is to achieve “decision-making
superiority”, said General Glen VanHerck, commander of Northern Command and the
North American Aerospace Defence Command, both of which are intended to protect
the US homeland from every form of enemy attack.
“What we’ve seen is the ability to get way
further [than] being reactive into actually being proactive — and I’m talking
not minutes and hours, I’m talking days,” he said at a Pentagon briefing.
The project outlined by the general, which
has been in development for about a year, echoes the film Minority Report,
based on a Philip K Dick story, where Tom Cruise was a cop in a “pre-crime”
division where arrests are made based on predictions of a future criminal acts.
VanHerck said the system represented “a
fundamental change in the way we use information and data” to accelerate
decision-making at the tactical and strategic level at a time when both Russia
and China are challenging the US on a daily basis.
In the latest of three experiments carried
out by the Pentagon and all 11 US combatant commands, one of the focuses was on
envisaging a threatened takeover of the Panama Canal by such a “peer
competitor”, disrupting a crucial line of communication for US military
logistics.
During the simulated attack, AI systems
exploited a mass of data in a way no human could absorb to predict how the
enemy might react, by examining patterns and changes. Once alerted to anything
significant, commanders fed the information to orbiting satellites to “take a
closer look at what might be going on in a specific location”, VanHerck said.
“The ability to see days in advance creates decision
space,” he added.
In the past, secret information provided by
intelligence sources such as satellites could take a long time for an analyst
to pore over.
“Now the machine can take a look and tell
you exactly how many cars are in a parking lot or how many aeroplanes are
parked on a ramp, or if a submarine is getting ready to leave or if a missile’s
going to launch. Where that may have taken days before, or hours, today it can
take seconds or less than minutes,” the general said.
The project was not about new ways of
gathering data: “This information exists from today’s satellites, today’s
radar, today’s undersea capabilities, today’s cyber, today’s intelligence
capabilities.
“What we’re doing is making that data
available and shared into a cloud where machine learning and AI look at it and
process it really quickly and provide it to decision-makers.