Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Comment Paper 2 - The Future of Drones on the Battlefield


Drones are becoming a weapon of choice in the war on terror.  They operate with conditional approval from Pakistani and Yemeni governments and are not as much of a visible encroachment on sovereignty as other forms of military action.  While unmanned vehicles have been an efficient way to fight the kinds of wars that the U.S. has fought over recent decades, they will not be able to fully remove humans from the threats of war.
            The use of drones significantly reduces the dangers that operators face.  A remotely piloted weapons system prevents the operator from facing physical dangers.  However, Bruntstetter addresses that those responsible for maintaining and deploying the aircraft at forward-operating bases are still at risk and even the pilots are at risk of symptoms similar to PTSD.  While these factors are still dangers that drone operations incur, the total risk of drone operations decreases due to the removal of the pilot from the cockpit.  If the aircraft malfunctions or if it shot down, the pilot is totally removed from the theater of conflict and out of harm’s way.
            Many arguments have been made that there will be a significant increase in the usage of robots in future armed conflicts.  However, it is more convincing that robot usage will develop at a much slower pace or even level out.  Current aerial drone usage requires air superiority.  Therefore, using aerial drones in a combat scenario where the enemy has a sufficient anti-aircraft capacity is unlikely because drones are an easier target to hit compared to more conventional weapons platforms.  Additionally, the research and development required for the usage of unmanned weapons can be extremely costly.   For example, Singer discusses the Army’s $340 billion Future Combat Systems program that began in 2003.  The plan ambitiously sought to have more unmanned vehicles in the Army’s brigades than unmanned ones (Singer, 113).  However, development and employment of these systems stalled due to unforeseen costs.  Overall, the program was cut because the benefits of further development did not outweigh the costs.   
            Robots will not likely replace humans in war, but may compliment an overall conventional military’s arsenal.  Robots will likely continue to perform tasks such as explosive ordinance disposal or drone strikes, but until robots can fully match the capabilities of conventional weapons while not incurring excessive costs, unmanned weapons will not likely evolve to dominate the battlefield.

2 comments:

  1. I disagree with you that robotic development will level out. I am not sure that is going to be the case because i think the prospect of taking the human element out of war is inciting to people. It does not seems likely that people will not continue long for ware to take the human element out of war offensives. On the face of it, it seems that there is nothing better than taking humans out of harms war when it comes to warfare. With this, the inceptive to continue developing these technologies is high. There is so much more that can be done is this felid and there are no signs of it stopping.

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    1. I do believe that we have just scratched the surface in terms of robotic capabilities. However, my argument is not that we do not have the technological potential to develop weapons that replace humans on the battlefield, but that the research and development costs are too high for the military to seriously consider replacing most of its conventionally manned weapons with unmanned ones. While unmanned systems have proven efficient for targeted airstrikes and EOD, how well can a drone perform against a manned strike fighter in a dogfight? It would be significantly more costly to develop an unmanned aircraft with a competitive air-to-air capacity compared to just producing more traditional and manned fighter aircraft. It is also controversial if a technology could ever be developed that perform all the tasks of a fighter pilot.

      Air-to-air combat is just one of many obstacles that robots would have to overcome in order to significantly increase their presence in war. The military will not pursue costly technologies if there is serious skepticism in how well those technologies will perform, especially with looming defense spending cuts.

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