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
- Military AI refers to the application of artificial intelligence to defence systems — from logistics and intelligence to Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems (LAWS), which can select and engage targets without direct human control. [S1]
- Governance of military AI sits at the intersection of technology regulation, international humanitarian law (IHL), and geopolitics — making it high-value for GS-II (IR) and GS-III (Security & Technology).
- Dual-use nature of AI (civilian + military R&D pipelines overlap) makes verification of any arms-control regime exceptionally difficult. [S4]
- India's strategic ambiguity — abstaining at REAIM 2026, voting against a UN First Committee resolution on LAWS (2023) — is a recurring theme in recent international affairs. [S2][S5]
2. Why in the News
- February 19, 2026: The third REAIM Summit (Responsible AI in the Military Domain) concluded; only 35 of 85 participating countries signed the 'Pathways to Action' declaration — down from 60 signatories at the previous summit. India, the US, and China all declined to sign. [S4]
- The abstention occurred just days before the India AI Impact Summit, drawing attention to the gap between India's civilian AI ambitions and its military AI governance posture. [S4]
- December 19, 2024: UN Secretary-General addressed the Security Council specifically on AI, urging restraint in military applications. [S6]
- UN General Assembly Resolution 79/239 and subsequent Resolution 80/58 marked a shift toward implementation-level measures on AI and security. [S3]
- UNIDIR Global Conference on AI, Security and Ethics scheduled for 18–19 June 2026, Palais des Nations, Geneva — further internationalising the debate. [S3]
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
- LAWS (Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems): Weapons that select and engage targets autonomously without meaningful human control.
- Human-in-the-loop: Human authorises each individual engagement.
- Human-on-the-loop: Human can override but system acts autonomously in real time.
- Human-out-of-the-loop: Fully autonomous — no human intervention possible.
- Dual-use technology: AI R&D serves both civilian and military ends simultaneously, complicating export controls and treaty verification. [S4]
- REAIM: Responsible Artificial Intelligence in the Military Domain — multilateral summit process, not a treaty body.
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
- India is a High Contracting Party to the CCW and participates in GGE on LAWS. [S2]
- India voted against UN First Committee LAWS resolution, 2023 (148 countries voted in favour). [S5]
- India did not sign REAIM 'Pathways to Action', Feb 2026. [S4]
Key Numbers
- REAIM 2026: 85 participating countries, 35 signatories (~41%).
- REAIM 2024 (Seoul): ~60 signatories.
- UN Secretary-General's target: prohibitions/restrictions on autonomous weapons by 2026. [S6]
- UN GA Res. 79/239 and 80/58 on AI in the military domain. [S3]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Great-power abstention (US, China, India) from REAIM 2026 signals that leading AI-capable states resist binding constraints, fearing strategic disadvantage. [S4]
- Russia-Ukraine and Gaza conflicts have accelerated deployment of AI-enabled drones, target recognition systems, and electronic warfare — demonstrating real-world urgency.
- India's abstention is partly strategic hedging: preserving freedom of action in border contexts (China, Pakistan) while engaging multilateral forums. [S2]
- A binding LAWS ban would disproportionately constrain states that lack AI capacity to develop compliant systems — a concern for India's Make in India Defence ambitions. [S8]
Legal / Constitutional (International Humanitarian Law)
- IHL principles at stake: Distinction (civilian vs. combatant), Proportionality, Precaution — LAWS risk violating all three if targeting algorithms are opaque.
- UN Secretary-General: "An algorithm must not be in full control of decisions involving killing." [S5]
- No country should use military AI that violates IHL or human rights law — UN consensus position. [S6]
- CCW GGE operates by consensus, allowing any major power to block progress indefinitely.
Ethical / Governance
- Accountability gap: If a LAWS kills civilians, who is responsible — the programmer, commander, or state? Existing war-crimes law has no clear answer.
- Meaningful human control (MHC) is the central governance concept; defining it operationally remains contested.
- India's article (Adya Madhavan, Takshashila Institution) argues India should push for a non-binding framework rooted in accountability principles aligned with its interests — between total abstention and premature hard commitments. [S4]
- Transparency of AI decision-making in targeting is near-impossible with deep learning models (black-box problem).
Scientific / Technological
- AI is dual-use: same computer vision, autonomous navigation, and NLP stack underpins consumer tech and weapons systems. Verification regimes face fundamental technical limits. [S4]
- DRDO active in autonomous systems and robotics (technology foresight domain). [S8]
- AI in warfare: ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance), cyber operations, logistics, predictive maintenance, and direct kinetic systems (loitering munitions, autonomous drones).
Administrative
- India has no dedicated Military AI policy document in the public domain as of 2026.
- MEITY governs civilian AI regulation; MoD/DRDO handles defence R&D — inter-ministerial coordination gap on dual-use AI.
- India's IndiaAI Mission (2024, ₹10,371 crore) focuses on civilian AI infrastructure; military AI governance is not addressed. [S9]
Historical
- Precedents: Anti-Personnel Mines Treaty (Ottawa, 1997), Chemical Weapons Convention (1993) — both achieved broad prohibition but not universal adherence (US, Russia not party to Ottawa).
- Pattern: Great powers resist prohibition; opt for codes of conduct — same dynamic now playing out in LAWS.
- Nuclear non-proliferation analogy: Early abstainers (India on NPT, 1968) later faced pressure but also preserved strategic autonomy.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- October 2024: UN First Committee passes resolution on LAWS; India had voted against a similar resolution in 2023. [S5]
- December 19, 2024: UN Secretary-General addresses Security Council on AI, calls for urgent governance measures and reiterated ban target by 2026. [S6]
- February 2026: REAIM Summit 3 — signatory numbers drop from ~60 to 35; India, US, China do not sign 'Pathways to Action'. [S4]
- June 2026 (current month): UNIDIR Global Conference on AI, Security and Ethics at Palais des Nations, Geneva — examining implications of AI for international peace and security; UNGA resolutions 79/239 and 80/58 cited as milestones shifting from principles to implementation. [S3]
- UN News (June 2025): Growing pressure internationally to regulate 'killer robots' amid proliferation in conflict zones. [S9]
- India AI Impact Summit held shortly after REAIM 3, highlighting domestic–international governance dissonance. [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks
- REAIM stands for Responsible Artificial Intelligence in the Military Domain. [S4]
- The first REAIM Summit was held in The Hague in February 2023. [S7]
- The second REAIM Summit was held in Seoul in September 2024. [S7]
- At REAIM 2026 (third summit), only 35 of 85 participating countries signed the 'Pathways to Action' declaration. [S4]
- India, the United States, and China were among countries that did not sign REAIM 2026. [S4]
- India voted against the UN First Committee resolution on LAWS in 2023 (148 countries voted in favour). [S5]
- The primary UN forum on LAWS is the Group of Governmental Experts (GGE) under the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW). [S1]
- UN Secretary-General's stated target: binding prohibitions/restrictions on autonomous weapons by 2026. [S6]
- UN General Assembly Resolution 79/239 is a key resolution on AI in the military domain. [S3]
- India's nodal ministry for international disarmament and LAWS negotiations is the Ministry of External Affairs (Disarmament & International Security Affairs division). [S2]
- DRDO is India's implementing agency for autonomous systems and robotics R&D. [S8]
- The concept of "meaningful human control (MHC)" is the central principle in LAWS governance debates. [S5]
- UNIDIR (UN Institute for Disarmament Research) organises the Global Conference on AI, Security and Ethics (June 2026, Geneva). [S3]
- AI is classified as dual-use technology — having both civilian and military applications — making treaty verification inherently difficult. [S4]
- 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
- "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)
- "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)
- "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
- Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW) — direct parent framework for LAWS negotiations; India's position within it.
- India's AI Policy & IndiaAI Mission — domestic context; why civilian AI governance and military AI governance are decoupled.
- Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and India's outsider status — historical analogy for India abstaining from major arms-control regimes.
- International Humanitarian Law (IHL) — Geneva Conventions — legal bedrock against which LAWS compliance is tested.
- Cyber Warfare and India's National Cyber Security Policy — overlapping domain; AI used in offensive cyber operations.
- DRDO and Indigenisation of Defence Technology — Make in India Defence; how autonomous systems R&D fits.
- UN Secretary-General's Common Agenda / Pact for the Future — broader UN reform framework within which AI governance sits.
- Dual-Use Technology Export Controls (Wassenaar Arrangement) — how AI hardware/software is currently (partially) regulated in trade.
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- 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.
- 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."
- 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.
- 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.
- 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
- [S1] Summit on Responsible Artificial Intelligence in the Military Domain — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summit_on_Responsible_Artificial_Intelligence_in_the_Military_Domain — (Tier 3/reference)
- [S2] Disarmament and International Security Affairs Overview — Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India — https://www.mea.gov.in/05-disarmament-and-international-security-affairs-overview — (Tier 1)
- [S3] UNIDIR Global Conference on AI, Security and Ethics 2026 — https://indico.un.org/event/1023183/overview — (Tier 2, UN)
- [S4] "Military AI and urgency of guardrails" — The Hindu, 19 February 2026 (article excerpt, primary source supplied) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-19/th_international/articleGSKFJVG8C-13571893.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S5] First Committee Approves New Resolution on Lethal Autonomous Weapons — UN Press, 2023 — https://press.un.org/en/2023/gadis3731.doc.htm — (Tier 2, UN)
- [S6] Secretary-General's Remarks to Security Council on Artificial Intelligence, December 2024 — https://www.un.org/sg/en/content/sg/statements/2024-12-19/secretary-generals-remarks-the-security-council-artificial-intelligence-bilingual-delivered — (Tier 2, UN)
- [S7] Minister of National Defence Remarks at REAIM Summit 2024 — Government of Canada — https://www.canada.ca/en/department-national-defence/news/2024/09/minister-of-national-defence-remarks-at-the-responsible-ai-in-the-military-domain-reaim-summit-2024.html — (Tier 3)
- [S8] Autonomous Systems and Robotics — DRDO, Ministry of Defence, Government of India — https://drdo.gov.in/drdo/en/offerings/technology-foresight/autonomous-systems-and-robotics — (Tier 1)
- [S9] As AI evolves, pressure mounts to regulate 'killer robots' — UN News, June 2025 — https://news.un.org/en/story/2025/06/1163891 — (Tier 2, UN)