Categories: Technology

‘Man-machine teaming’ is a ‘critical element’ in AI competition with China: Joint Chiefs Chairman

Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman General Joe Dunford fields questions on how the US military needs to have a competitive advantage over China in the field of AI.

In a streamed interview during the Washington Post‘s Transformers: Defense Summit on December 6, foreign affairs columnist David Ignatius asked General Dunford about how the US can maintain a competitive advantage over China when it came to AI.

Read More: US defense intelligence warns of AI-human hybrid soldiers from China

“How do you see AI transforming your business of military power and whether you worry that we’re not doing enough, given its apparent importance to get our focus on meeting this Chinese challenge?” Ignatius asked.

“Man-machine teaming is obviously a critical element”

“First of all in our profession, one of the areas that’s going to really determine future outcomes is speed of decision making, so AI is certainly relevant to speed of decision making,” said the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

“If you think about cyberspace, AI is critical to being able to implement effective ways of protecting ourselves in cyberspace. If you think about operating in that environment, […] when you talk about capacity sufficient to be able to operate in a very complex operating environment, man-machine teaming is obviously a critical element.

“I don’t think it would be an overstatement when we talk about artificial intelligence to say that whoever has a competitive advantage in artificial intelligence and can field systems informed by artificial intelligence, could very well have an overall competitive advantage. I mean, I think it can be that important.”

General Dunford echoed the words of Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) Director Lieutenant General Robert P. Ashley, Jr, who said in October that one of the biggest decisions that the United States military will have to make is how to deal with the “integration of humans and machines” that China is pursuing.

“Without exaggeration I can tell you that our overall competitive advantage has reduced”

The Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman went on to explain that the US military’s competitive advantage in AI has been reduced over the past decade.

“With regard to whether we’re doing enough, I would just tell you in this and so many areas, I would never be complacent in telling you that we’re doing enough,” Dunford said.

“We are clearly in a competition for competitive advantage, and without exaggeration I can tell you that our overall competitive advantage has reduced over the past 10 or 12 years. Ten or 12 years ago whoever was sitting in my seat could have said that we are uncontested in all domains, uncontested in our ability to project power when and where necessary. I can’t say that today.”

General Dunford then responded to the concerns of big tech employees at Google, Microsoft, and Amazon who have rebelled against their employers for what they consider “unethical” use of technology.

Read More: Big tech employees voicing ethical concerns echo warnings from history: Op-ed

“What would you say to Google employees if they were watching this streaming, or employees at Microsoft or Amazon for that matter? What would the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff say about the need for this brainpower?” Ignatius asked Dunford.

“I’m not sure that the people at Google will enjoy a world order that is informed by the norms or standards of Russia or China”

“I’d say hey! we’re the good guys,” the general responded.

“We are the good guys and it’s inexplicable to me that we would make compromises in order to advance our business interest in China where we know that freedoms are restrained, where we know that China will take intellectual property from companies — strip that away, put the companies in the dust bin of history and then use that intellectual property for their own advantage.

“We know those things are taking place, and so it’s inexplicable to me that we wouldn’t have a cooperative relationship with the private sector.”

“We have been able to leverage the full human capital and the ideas of the American people”

“I would also say that if you look at the world order that we’ve enjoyed since World War II, and you look at the values that are represented in that world order, we have been arguably the leader of the free world since World War II.

Read More: ‘AI will represent a paradigm shift in warfare’: WEF predicts an Ender’s Game-like future

“Were we not to have the capability of leading the free world and advancing the values and interests that reflect our country’s values and interests in the Western world’s values and interests, there will be alternatives to create an alternative order, and I’m not sure that the people at Google will enjoy a world order that is informed by the norms or standards of Russia or China.”

He went on to say the the US military has benefitted from the public sector for decades and that “one of the competitive advantages the US military has enjoyed for decades has been the public partner, private partnership where we have been able to leverage the full human capital and the ideas of the American people, and if we don’t have access to that, we are not going to be competitive.”

Tim Hinchliffe

The Sociable editor Tim Hinchliffe covers tech and society, with perspectives on public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, think tanks, big tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies. Previously, Tim was a reporter for the Ghanaian Chronicle in West Africa and an editor at Colombia Reports in South America. These days, he is only responsible for articles he writes and publishes in his own name. tim@sociable.co

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