Black-box AI and cheap drones are outpacing global rules of war

Why it matters: AI and drone tech are transforming warfare, raising urgent questions about ethics, accountability, and global stability.
- U.S. military is leveraging its most advanced AI, including Anthropic's Claude AI for intelligence and targeting, despite a contract termination over usage disagreements.
- Iran has launched thousands of inexpensive drones, disrupting global oil supplies and air travel, with experts like Steven Feldstein warning of "unpredictable, risky, and lethal consequences" as AI integration advances.
- AI-powered decision-support systems offer unprecedented speed, scale, and cost-efficiency in processing surveillance and intelligence for potential strikes, a "game-changer" according to Feldstein.
- Steven Feldstein (Carnegie Endowment) expresses concern that reliance on untested, lethal AI systems could lead to catastrophic civilian strikes and erode human accountability and command oversight.
- Cheap, commercially available drones, costing as little as $2,000, are undermining advanced military systems and are accessible to non-state actors, accelerating a shift toward "forever wars," per the Institute for Economics and Peace.
The Middle East conflict highlights a critical imbalance: advanced AI and cheap drones are rapidly evolving warfare, outpacing global regulations. While the U.S. military deploys sophisticated AI for decision support, concerns mount over untested systems, potential civilian casualties, and diminished human accountability, as cheap, easily accessible drones proliferate among both state and non-state actors.



