Contents

SIPRI Yearbook 2014

SIPRI Yearbook 2014

II. The governance of autonomous weapons

Chapter:
9. Conventional arms control and military confidence building
Source:
SIPRI Yearbook 2014
Author(s):
Ian Anthony, Lina Grip, Chris Holland

As early as the 1980s, all four branches of the United States armed forces saw advantages in increasing the degree of autonomy of weapons on the battlefield. Without a human operator there is no need for in-vehicle life support systems, and less need for an intervention force to rescue and evacuate personnel. Such systems can potentially be smaller and faster, diminish the manpower burden, reduce the need for high-bandwidth communication, enable a greater capability in difficult environments beyond human control, be less susceptible to signal jamming or hijacking and have longer endurance when patrolling, and they are likely to be cheaper than manned systems.1

Citation (MLA):
Anthony, Ian, Lina Grip, and Chris Holland. "9. Conventional arms control and military confidence building." SIPRI Yearbook. SIPRI. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2016. Web. 29 Apr. 2025. <https://www.sipriyearbook.org/view/9780198712596/sipri-9780198712596-chapter-10-div1-3.xml>.
Citation (APA):
Anthony, I., Grip, L., & Holland, C. (2016). 9. Conventional arms control and military confidence building. In SIPRI, SIPRI Yearbook 2014: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Retrieved 29 Apr. 2025, from https://www.sipriyearbook.org/view/9780198712596/sipri-9780198712596-chapter-10-div1-3.xml
Citation (Chicago):
Anthony, Ian, Lina Grip, and Chris Holland. "9. Conventional arms control and military confidence building." In SIPRI Yearbook 2014: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security, SIPRI. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016). Retrieved 29 Apr. 2025, from https://www.sipriyearbook.org/view/9780198712596/sipri-9780198712596-chapter-10-div1-3.xml
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