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LAWS can’t be outlawed; their use can be controlled

Lehtal autonomous weapons systems are on the verge of becoming central to military operations. Their highlight is a high level of autonomy from human intervention when they engage a target. This creates a new risk in terms of collateral damage. Nations are unlikely to stop developing LAWS, but they can set boundaries on their operational context

June 03, 2025 / 16:44 IST
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India has maintained a cautious stance on LAWS. (Representative image)

By Adya Madhavan

Lethal autonomous weapons systems, or LAWS, may be on the brink of becoming central to military operations. However, the mechanisms to govern such capabilities are struggling to keep up. By their very nature, LAWS are difficult to define and challenging to restrict.

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Can’t define, can’t proscribe

The definitional conundrum stems from the desire to not have emergent military capabilities be subject to undue restrictions - if you can’t define it, you can’t proscribe it. As a result, nations struggle to agree on the nitty-gritty – the level of autonomy of these systems, and the contexts in which they can operate autonomously. A common thread to most definitions, though, is that LAWS are systems with the highest possible level of autonomy, in that they can both select and strike a target independently of human intervention.