Cyborgs Patrol the Streets of Iraq

by phrolen | August 3, 2007 at 08:21 am
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Cyborgs Patrol the Streets of Iraq!

Cyborgs Patrol the Streets of Iraq!

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    "We'll meet again" were The Terminator's last words to John Connor in Terminator 3 Rise of the Machines. It seems though, that instead of waiting ten years for Arnold Schwarzenegger's next money crunch, Terminator fans needn't look any furthur than the streets of Baghdad for part quatro of the epic cyborg series. It seems the T-1000's primitave cousins have gone to work for the U.S. military killing terrorists. Now if we could just replicate Chuck Norris the war would be won in a walk.


First Armed Robots on Patrol in Iraq (Updated)

By Noah Shachtman EmailAugust 02, 2007 | 5:56:00 PMCategories: Drones

Swords Robots have been roaming the streets of Iraq, since shortly after the war began. Now, for the first time -- the first time in any warzone -- the machines are carrying guns.

After years of development, three "special weapons observation remote reconnaissance direct action system" (SWORDS) robots have deployed to Iraq, armed with M249 machine guns. The 'bots "haven't fired their weapons yet," Michael Zecca, the SWORDS program manager, tells DANGER ROOM. "But that'll be happening soon."

The SWORDS -- modified versions of bomb-disposal robots used throughout Iraq -- were first declared ready for duty back in 2004. But concerns about safety kept the robots from being sent over the the battlefield. The machines had a tendency to spin out of control from time to time. That was an annoyance during ordnance-handling missions; no one wanted to contemplate the consequences during a firefight.

So the radio-controlled robots were retooled, for greater safety. In the past, weak signals would keep the robots from getting orders for as much as eight seconds -- a significant lag during combat. Now, the SWORDS won't act on a command, unless it's received right away. A three-part arming process -- with both physical and electronic safeties -- is required before firing. Most importantly, the machines now come with kill switches, in case there's any odd behavior. "So now we can kill the unit if it goes crazy," Zecca says.

As initially reported in National Defense magazine, only three of the robots are currently in Iraq. Zecca says he's ready to send more, "but we don't have the money. It's not a priority for the Army, yet." He believes that'll change, once the robots begin getting into firefights.

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Jordan Yerman

Update: The SWORDS patrol-bots are getting pulled from active duty, though they didn't turn on their creators. 

But the remote-operated SWORDS units were almost immediately pulled off the battlefield, before firing a single shot at the enemy. Here at the conference, the Army’s Program Executive Officer for Ground Forces, Kevin Fahey, was asked what happened to SWORDS. After all, no specific reason for the 11th-hour withdrawal ever came from the military or its contractors at Foster-Miller. Fahey’s answer was vague, but he confirmed that the robots never opened fire when they weren’t supposed to. His understanding is that “the gun started moving when it was not intended to move.” In other words, the SWORDS swung around in the wrong direction, and the plug got pulled fast. No humans were hurt, but as Fahey pointed out, “once you’ve done something that’s really bad, it can take 10 or 20 years to try it again.”
If I were in an active war zone, the last thing I would want would be a robot assistant that can't, in the words of Winston Wolf, "keep [its] spurs from jingling and jangling".

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