militaries do not win wars merely by acquiring new gadgets, but by developing the institutions, training regimens, logistical networks, and doctrinal concepts that enable those tools to be used effectively at scale
That makes sense to me ... sort of like if you want to build a big software project, the team / the communication structure / the product / the motivation will matter a lot more than whether you're using Claude Code or Copilot, etc.
Although the article is spot on about how its not just technical but also organisational and doctrinal that the US isn't ready for the drone wars if it were to be fighting a peer today let alone tomorrow, it also describes aircraft etc as "few but exquisite" as though the examples of what the US military industrial complex is pushing are cheap and affordable.
The drones that Anduril and Palantir are pushing are also 'exquisite'.
The drones being used so effectively in all domains in Ukraine by both sides are orders of magnitude cheaper still.
The US military industrial complex is out to get good margins selling exquisite systems. No change here, even with the new injection of Silicon Valley cover.
I think this view is incredibly wrong. I suppose it's probably true for today's drones, but I think a completely different device is possible:
An autonomous vehicle, flying at 1-2 metres, very fast, hardly targetable and carrying either a small bomb or a device which projects shrapnel precisely at an individual soldier.
At present machines like this would be expensive and limited in range-- you'd probably need a big GPU on it, you'd probably need some kind primary cell that outperforms rechargeable lithium-ion batteries, maybe split it in two half-- one attacking part and one slow gliding part. Thousands of dollars, and weight, complexity, etc. But I am fairly convinced that machines like this are possible and I don't see how human front-line soldiers can operate in an environment saturated with them. I don't even believe that long-range assaults, 1000 km etc., are something these kinds of things won't be able to do-- after all, many birds migrate vast distances, and I think aluminium contains more energy than fat per weight.
So I think the author is right regarding current sales pitches, but also wrong about the long term impact. There is nothing on the market today that would be anything but an incremental improvement in an already existing capability.
However
The thing everyone knows is coming is fully artificial boots-on-the-ground, and this will be a categorical revolution on par with the use of airplanes in warfare. (note: "boots" could still be drones).
Like the author points out "A battalion commander in the Ukrainian Army stated to me a few weeks ago that even in the Summer of 2025, the single most decisive factor in his unit’s ability to hold and take ground is the number of infantry".
The instant you have a factory that churns out the equivalent of a "dude with a rifle in a dugout", you've suddenly changed warfare in all the non-tactical ways the author was talking about.
The politics of war becomes different: your battlefield losses may no longer be measured in lives, no one comes home with PTSD, and no collateral damage is due to soldiers' malice.
The doctrines of war become different. Suicide charges/runbys are fine, there's no need to worry about PoWs, and friendly fire is potentially a thing of the past.
"is coming" is a prediction so vague as to lack value.
A robot that is able to engage in combat with humans, across random terrain, for long periods without recharging? Some day, sure. Not any time in the next five years, at the very least.
Drones and autonomous systems probably won't be the end of mankind as Terminator and Black Mirror's Metalhead pictured, but civilians will end being their targets, by mistake or design, and it won't be any accountability for them.
>Luckey’s imagined scenario, where Taiwan defeats a Chinese invasion in 2029 outright with swarms of AI-powered drones (cruise missiles), autonomous submarines (torpedoes), and mass-producible missiles (more cruise missiles), is an excellent piece of storytelling. But as a strategic vision, it is hilariously flawed.
The Ukrainians use of naval drones and missiles against Russia's navy has been spectacularly successful to the extent they have had to withdraw from anywhere near Ukraine. While Luckey may be off on the details I'm sure it would be a major issue if China tried to invade Taiwan.
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[ 5.2 ms ] story [ 28.7 ms ] threadThat makes sense to me ... sort of like if you want to build a big software project, the team / the communication structure / the product / the motivation will matter a lot more than whether you're using Claude Code or Copilot, etc.
The drones that Anduril and Palantir are pushing are also 'exquisite'.
The drones being used so effectively in all domains in Ukraine by both sides are orders of magnitude cheaper still.
The US military industrial complex is out to get good margins selling exquisite systems. No change here, even with the new injection of Silicon Valley cover.
An autonomous vehicle, flying at 1-2 metres, very fast, hardly targetable and carrying either a small bomb or a device which projects shrapnel precisely at an individual soldier.
At present machines like this would be expensive and limited in range-- you'd probably need a big GPU on it, you'd probably need some kind primary cell that outperforms rechargeable lithium-ion batteries, maybe split it in two half-- one attacking part and one slow gliding part. Thousands of dollars, and weight, complexity, etc. But I am fairly convinced that machines like this are possible and I don't see how human front-line soldiers can operate in an environment saturated with them. I don't even believe that long-range assaults, 1000 km etc., are something these kinds of things won't be able to do-- after all, many birds migrate vast distances, and I think aluminium contains more energy than fat per weight.
However
The thing everyone knows is coming is fully artificial boots-on-the-ground, and this will be a categorical revolution on par with the use of airplanes in warfare. (note: "boots" could still be drones).
Like the author points out "A battalion commander in the Ukrainian Army stated to me a few weeks ago that even in the Summer of 2025, the single most decisive factor in his unit’s ability to hold and take ground is the number of infantry".
The instant you have a factory that churns out the equivalent of a "dude with a rifle in a dugout", you've suddenly changed warfare in all the non-tactical ways the author was talking about.
The politics of war becomes different: your battlefield losses may no longer be measured in lives, no one comes home with PTSD, and no collateral damage is due to soldiers' malice.
The doctrines of war become different. Suicide charges/runbys are fine, there's no need to worry about PoWs, and friendly fire is potentially a thing of the past.
A robot that is able to engage in combat with humans, across random terrain, for long periods without recharging? Some day, sure. Not any time in the next five years, at the very least.
They will be used.
Anything else is just wishful thinking.
The Ukrainians use of naval drones and missiles against Russia's navy has been spectacularly successful to the extent they have had to withdraw from anywhere near Ukraine. While Luckey may be off on the details I'm sure it would be a major issue if China tried to invade Taiwan.