Contractors or robots? Future warfare between privatization and automation

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10 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Contemporary warfare is increasingly shaped by the complex relationship between the privatization of security and technologically driven automation. On the one hand, there is a growing tendency to employ private military and security companies for a range of military support tasks. On the other hand, the growing automation of security technologies is bound to make war less manpower intensive. Combat systems will have much more autonomy and humans will be working more closely with machines than they do today. The article provides an original analysis on the interplay between the privatization of security tasks and technologically driven automation and investigates their impact on the defence industry and the armed forces. These two sets of actors are arguably among the most impacted by the multi-faceted relations between privatization and automation. Technological progress creates the need for contractors to maintain and operate platforms that militaries do not have expertise to run. However, technologically driven automation - often developed in value chains far removed from the military-industrial pipeline - might also replace private contractors in non-core security tasks. The possibility to employ automated and autonomous systems will hence impact on the already delicate balance between private contractors and publicly-funded armed forces. .

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)250-271
Number of pages22
JournalSmall Wars and Insurgencies
Volume33
Issue number1-2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Public authorities are also trying to adapt to these new market dynamics. In the US, the Pentagon explicitly aims to adopt a venture capital model of development by partnering with the start-up business community in the Silicon Valley. This would ideally allow US national security agencies to steer nascent companies’ business trajectories by firms to apply their innovations to defence. A striking example is In-Q-Tel (IQT), a strategic investment firm funded by the CIA. Among other things, IQT finances also the now-famous Palantir Technologies, a data analysis agency that works very closely with US security agencies. In 2019, Palantir Technologies won an $800 million contract for updating the US Amy’s software on ground systems, becoming the first Silicon Valley company ‘to win a defence program of record’.

Funding Information:
This work was supported by the FWO Research Foundation?Flanders (FWO) G054221N grant on ?Competition and cooperation in European defence: private versus public governance and EU policy outcomes?

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

Keywords

  • Armed forces
  • automation
  • contractors
  • defence industry
  • privatization
  • security

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