When people argue about “AI in weapons” like it’s a sci-fi trigger bot… I can’t take it seriously.
A “kill chain” isn’t a vibe. It’s a process
Find, Fix, Track, Target, Engage, Assess (F2T2EA) and most of it is information work: sorting signal from noise, building confidence, tightening timelines, and getting decisions to the right humans fast enough to matter.
That’s why this Anthropic vs. DoD fight is getting attention. It’s not just “ethics.”
-> It’s about control.
Here’s what’s actually on the table:
Anthropic says they’ll support the military — but they want two carve-outs: no mass domestic surveillance and no fully autonomous weapons (their definition: systems that “take humans out of the loop entirely” and automate selecting/engaging targets).
Anthropic also says DoD demanded “any lawful use” and threatened offboarding / “supply chain risk” pressure if they didn’t comply.
A DoD memo posted on media.defense.gov explicitly calls for models “free from usage policy constraints” and directs adding standard “any lawful use” language into AI contracts.
The dispute escalated fast — including federal offboarding/blacklist actions and a “supply chain risk” designation as reported by major outlets. Now my take, as someone who’s lived inside the targeting reality:
AI can absolutely help the kill chain without ever being the one “pulling the trigger.”
Speeding up Find/Fix/Track/Target changes outcomes — and it’s not hypothetical.
But if we’re going to talk about “any lawful use,” then stop outsourcing national policy to contract fights.
DoD already has policy that autonomous weapon systems should allow appropriate human judgment over the use of force. So the real question isn’t whether humans matter.
It’s this:
Do we want safety and governance implemented at the model layer (vendor guardrails), the contract layer (“any lawful use”), or the law/policy layer (Congress + DoD doctrine + auditing)?
Because “Terms of Service vs. warfighting” is a stupid place to settle a question this big.
If you’ve worked in intel, targeting, acquisition, or governance:
Where should the boundary live? model, contract, or law, and who owns accountability when it breaks?
OgsyedIE•1h ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/lying
colek42•48m ago
OgsyedIE•21m ago