Military AI and urgency of guardrails


Military AI and the Urgency of Guardrails

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-II / GS-III


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
Pre-2000s Autonomous systems in limited advisory/sensing roles; no systematic governance
2014 UN Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW) establishes a Group of Governmental Experts (GGE) on LAWS — first multilateral forum on killer robots
Feb 2023 REAIM Summit 1, The Hague — Political Declaration on Responsible Military Use of AI adopted; ~60 countries sign blueprint
Oct 2023 UN First Committee resolution on LAWS passed (148 yes votes); India votes against [S5]
Sep 2024 REAIM Summit 2, Seoul — follow-up declarations; Canada among signatories [S7]
Feb 2026 REAIM Summit 3 — signatory count drops to 35/85; India, US, China abstain [S4]
Jun 2026 UNIDIR Conference on AI, Security and Ethics, Geneva [S3]

Predecessor frameworks: CCW GGE on LAWS (since 2014); US DoD Directive 3000.09 (Autonomous Weapons, 2012, updated 2023); NATO AI principles (2021).


4. Core Static Facts

Definitions & Terminology

Key Bodies / Processes

Body Role
CCW GGE on LAWS Primary UN forum; consensus-based, thus slow
REAIM Non-binding multilateral summit (2023 → 2024 → 2026)
UNIDIR UN Institute for Disarmament Research — technical arm
UN First Committee Disarmament resolutions (UNGA)
India: MEA (Disarmament & International Security Affairs division) India's nodal body for LAWS negotiations [S2]
India: DRDO Technical R&D in autonomous systems and robotics [S8]

India's Formal Positions

Key Numbers


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional (International Humanitarian Law)

Ethical / Governance

Scientific / Technological

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. REAIM stands for Responsible Artificial Intelligence in the Military Domain. [S4]
  2. The first REAIM Summit was held in The Hague in February 2023. [S7]
  3. The second REAIM Summit was held in Seoul in September 2024. [S7]
  4. At REAIM 2026 (third summit), only 35 of 85 participating countries signed the 'Pathways to Action' declaration. [S4]
  5. India, the United States, and China were among countries that did not sign REAIM 2026. [S4]
  6. India voted against the UN First Committee resolution on LAWS in 2023 (148 countries voted in favour). [S5]
  7. The primary UN forum on LAWS is the Group of Governmental Experts (GGE) under the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW). [S1]
  8. UN Secretary-General's stated target: binding prohibitions/restrictions on autonomous weapons by 2026. [S6]
  9. UN General Assembly Resolution 79/239 is a key resolution on AI in the military domain. [S3]
  10. India's nodal ministry for international disarmament and LAWS negotiations is the Ministry of External Affairs (Disarmament & International Security Affairs division). [S2]
  11. DRDO is India's implementing agency for autonomous systems and robotics R&D. [S8]
  12. The concept of "meaningful human control (MHC)" is the central principle in LAWS governance debates. [S5]
  13. UNIDIR (UN Institute for Disarmament Research) organises the Global Conference on AI, Security and Ethics (June 2026, Geneva). [S3]
  14. AI is classified as dual-use technology — having both civilian and military applications — making treaty verification inherently difficult. [S4]
  15. The Takshashila Institution (think tank) published the article arguing India should pursue a non-binding accountability framework for military AI. [S4]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Important International institutions, agreements; India's foreign policy; Effect of policies of developed countries on India's interests
GS-III Indigenisation of technology and developing new technology; Challenges to internal security; Science and Technology — developments and applications; Awareness in the field of IT and robotics
GS-IV Ethics in international relations; Use of technology in governance and ethical dimensions

Plausible Mains Question Stems

  1. "The declining number of signatories at successive REAIM Summits reflects fundamental tensions in governing military AI. Critically analyse India's strategic position and suggest a coherent policy framework." (GS-II / GS-III, 250 words)
  2. "Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems pose unprecedented challenges to International Humanitarian Law. Examine the adequacy of existing multilateral mechanisms and India's role in shaping governance norms." (GS-II, 250 words)
  3. "The dual-use nature of artificial intelligence renders traditional arms-control verification approaches obsolete. Discuss with reference to global efforts to regulate military AI." (GS-III, 150 words)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

  1. Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW) — direct parent framework for LAWS negotiations; India's position within it.
  2. India's AI Policy & IndiaAI Mission — domestic context; why civilian AI governance and military AI governance are decoupled.
  3. Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and India's outsider status — historical analogy for India abstaining from major arms-control regimes.
  4. International Humanitarian Law (IHL) — Geneva Conventions — legal bedrock against which LAWS compliance is tested.
  5. Cyber Warfare and India's National Cyber Security Policy — overlapping domain; AI used in offensive cyber operations.
  6. DRDO and Indigenisation of Defence Technology — Make in India Defence; how autonomous systems R&D fits.
  7. UN Secretary-General's Common Agenda / Pact for the Future — broader UN reform framework within which AI governance sits.
  8. Dual-Use Technology Export Controls (Wassenaar Arrangement) — how AI hardware/software is currently (partially) regulated in trade.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. REAIM ≠ a treaty or binding agreement — it is a summit process producing political declarations, not legally binding instruments. Aspirants often conflate it with formal arms-control treaties.
  2. Confusing REAIM summit numbers: Summit 1 = The Hague (Feb 2023); Summit 2 = Seoul (Sep 2024); Summit 3 = Feb 2026. The article refers to "the third global summit."
  3. India's vote vs. India's abstention: India voted against (not merely abstained from) the UN First Committee LAWS resolution in 2023 — a stronger negative signal than abstention.
  4. MEITY ≠ nodal body for military AI — MEITY governs civilian AI; military AI governance sits with MoD/MEA, not MEITY. Confusing these is a common trap.
  5. LAWS ≠ all military AI: LAWS refers specifically to weapons that select and engage targets autonomously. Military AI also covers logistics, ISR, predictive maintenance — which face different and less contentious governance questions.

11. Sources