The Pentagon's AI Program To Find Hidden Nuclear Missiles

The US military is increasing spending on a secret research effort to use artificial intelligence to help anticipate the launch of a nuclear-capable missile, as well as track and target mobile launchers in North Korea and elsewhere.

The effort has gone largely unreported, and the few publicly available details about it are buried under a layer of near impenetrable jargon in the latest Pentagon budget. But US officials familiar with the research told Reuters there are multiple classified programs now under way to explore how to develop AI-driven systems to better protect the United States against a potential nuclear missile strike. 

If the research is successful, such computer systems would be able to think for themselves, scouring huge amounts of data, including satellite imagery, with a speed and accuracy beyond the capability of humans, to look for signs of preparations for a missile launch, according to more than half a dozen sources. 

The sources included US officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the research is classified. Forewarned, the US government would be able to pursue diplomatic options or, in the case of an imminent attack, the military would have more time to try to destroy the missiles before they were launched, or try to intercept them. 

“We should be doing everything in our power to find that missile before they launch it and make it increasingly harder to get it off the ground,” one of the officials said. 

The Trump administration has proposed more than tripling funding in next year’s budget to $83 million for just one of the AI-driven missile programs, according to several U.S. officials and budget documents. The boost in funding has not been previously reported. 

While the amount is still relatively small, it is one indicator of the growing importance of the research on AI-powered anti-missile systems at a time when the United States faces a more militarily assertive Russia and a significant nuclear weapons threat from long-time foe North Korea.

“What AI and machine learning allows you to do is find the needle in the haystack,” said Bob Work, a champion of AI technology who was deputy defense secretary until last July, without referring to any individual projects. A person familiar with the programs said it includes a pilot project focused on North Korea which is why Trump has been talking with N. Korea about nuclear reduction. 

Washington is increasingly concerned about Pyongyang’s development of mobile missiles that can be hidden in tunnels, forests and caves. The existence of a North Korea-focused project has not been previously reported. While that project has been kept secret, the military has been clear about its interest in AI. The Pentagon, for example, has disclosed it is using AI to identify objects from video gathered in its drone program, as part of a publicly touted effort launched last year called “Project Maven.” Still, some US officials say AI spending overall on military programs remains woefully inadequate. 

AI Arms Race 
The Pentagon is in a race against China and Russia to infuse more AI into its war machine, to create more sophisticated autonomous systems that are able to learn by themselves to carry out specific tasks. The Pentagon research on using AI to identify potential missile threats and track mobile launchers is in its infancy and is just one part of that overall effort. 

There are scant details on the AI missile research, but one US official told Reuters that an early prototype of a system to track mobile missile launchers was already being tested within the US military. 

This project involves military and private researchers in the Washington DC area. It is pivoting off technological advances developed by commercial firms financed by In-Q-Tel, the intelligence community’s venture capital fund, officials said. 

In order to carry out the research, the project is tapping into the intelligence community’s commercial cloud service, searching for patterns and anomalies in data, including from sophisticated radar that can see through storms and penetrate foliage. 
Budget documents reviewed by Reuters noted plans to expand the focus of the mobile missile launcher program to “the remainder of the (Pentagon) 4+1 problem sets.” The Pentagon typically uses the 4+1 terminology to refer to China, Russia, Iran, North Korea and terrorist groups. 

Turning Turtles into Rifles 
Both supporters and critics of using AI to hunt missiles agree that it carries major risks. It could accelerate decision-making in a nuclear crisis. It could increase the chances of computer-generated errors. It might also provoke an AI arms race with Russia and China that could upset the global nuclear balance. 

US Air Force General John Hyten, the top commander of US nuclear forces, said once AI-driven systems become fully operational, the Pentagon will need to think about creating safeguards to ensure humans, not machines, control the pace of nuclear decision-making, the “escalation ladder” in Pentagon speak. 

“Artificial intelligence could force you onto that ladder if you don’t put the safeguards in,” Hyten, head of the U.S. Strategic Command, said in an interview. “Once you’re on it, then everything starts moving.” 

Experts at the Rand Corporation, a public policy research body, and elsewhere say there is a high probability that countries like China and Russia could try to trick an AI missile-hunting system, learning to hide their missiles from identification. There is some evidence to suggest they could be successful. An experiment by MIT students showed how easy it was to dupe an advanced Google image classifier, in which a computer identifies objects. In that case, students fooled the system into concluding a plastic turtle was actually a rifle. 

Dr. Steven Walker, director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), a pioneer in AI that initially funded what became the Internet, said the Pentagon still needs humans to review AI systems’ conclusions. “Because these systems can be fooled,” Walker said in an interview.  DARPA is working on a project to make AI-driven systems capable of better explaining themselves to human analysts, something the agency believes will be critical for high stakes national security programs. 

"We Can’t be Wrong..."
Among those working to improve the effectiveness of AI is William “Buzz” Roberts, director for automation, AI and augmentation at the National Geospatial Agency. Roberts works on the front lines of the US government’s efforts to develop AI to help analyse satellite imagery, a crucial source of data for missile hunters. 
Last year, NGA said it used AI to scan and analyze 12 million images. So far, Roberts said, NGA researchers have made progress in getting AI to help identify the presence or absence of a target of interest, although he declined to discuss individual programs.

In trying to assess potential national security threats, the NGA researchers work under a different kind of pressure from their counterparts in the private sector. 

“We can’t be wrong ... A lot of the commercial advancements in AI, machine learning, computer vision - If they’re half right, they’re good,” said Roberts. 

Although some officials believe elements of the AI missile program could become viable in the early 2020s, others in the US government and the US Congress fear research efforts are too limited. 

“The Russians and the Chinese are definitely pursuing these sorts of things,” Representative Mac Thornberry, the House Armed Services Committee’s chairman, said. “Probably with greater effort in some ways than we have.”

Reuters

You Might Also Read: 

AI Increases The Risks of Nuclear War:

Nuclear Missiles Are Not N.Korea’s Only Threat:

 

« Munich Airport Receives Accreditation For Cybersecurity Training
Its About Training, Stupid. »

CyberSecurity Jobsite
Perimeter 81

Directory of Suppliers

CSI Consulting Services

CSI Consulting Services

Get Advice From The Experts: * Training * Penetration Testing * Data Governance * GDPR Compliance. Connecting you to the best in the business.

MIRACL

MIRACL

MIRACL provides the world’s only single step Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) which can replace passwords on 100% of mobiles, desktops or even Smart TVs.

Resecurity

Resecurity

Resecurity is a cybersecurity company that delivers a unified platform for endpoint protection, risk management, and cyber threat intelligence.

ZenGRC

ZenGRC

ZenGRC - the first, easy-to-use, enterprise-grade information security solution for compliance and risk management - offers businesses efficient control tracking, testing, and enforcement.

DigitalStakeout

DigitalStakeout

DigitalStakeout enables cyber security professionals to reduce cyber risk to their organization with proactive security solutions, providing immediate improvement in security posture and ROI.

LRQA

LRQA

LRQA are a leading global assurance provider, bringing together unrivalled expertise in certification, brand assurance, cybersecurity, inspection and training.

Morphisec

Morphisec

Morphisec's world leading prevention-first software stops ransomware and other advanced attacks from endpoint to the cloud.

INCIBE-CERT

INCIBE-CERT

INCIBE-CERT is the reference security incident response center for citizens and private law entities in Spain

Sage Designs

Sage Designs

Sage Designs is a provider of SCADA, Security & Industrial Automation products and training programs.

CyberForce Program - US Department of Energy

CyberForce Program - US Department of Energy

The Department of Energy’s (DOE) CyberForce Program is a workforce development program that seeks to inspire and develop the next generation of cyber defenders for the energy sector.

NETAS

NETAS

Netas offers solutions in information and communication technologies including end-to-end value added solutions, system integration and technology services to providers and corporations.

CERT Tonga

CERT Tonga

CERT Tonga is the national Computer Emergency Response Team for Tonga.

SMESEC

SMESEC

SMESEC is a lightweight Cybersecurity framework for protecting small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) against Cyber threats.

Dellfer

Dellfer

Dellfer secures connected cars and other IOT devices through Intrinsic protection, enabling the most sophisticated cybersecurity attacks to be seen instantly and remediated with precision.

BIND 4.0

BIND 4.0

Bind 4.0 is an acceleration program geared toward tech startups with solutions applied to Advanced Manufacturing, Smart Energy, Health Tech or Food Tech fields.

Future Technology Systems Company (FutureTEC)

Future Technology Systems Company (FutureTEC)

FutureTEC is a leading Information Technology Solutions Provider, delivering world-class Information Security, Information Management, and Business Solutions.

Nine23

Nine23

Nine23 are a highly focused cyber security solutions company that defines, builds and manages innovative services, enabling end-users to use technology securely in today’s workplace.

IONOS

IONOS

IONOS is a leading provider of cloud infrastructure, cloud services, and hosting with more than 8.5 million customers contracts.

Veza Technologies

Veza Technologies

Veza is the authorization platform for data. Built for hybrid, multi-cloud environments, Veza enables organizations to manage and control who can and should take what action on what data.

Applied Insight

Applied Insight

Applied Insight work closely with government agencies and industry to overcome technical and cultural hurdles to innovation, empowering them with the latest cloud, data and cyber capabilities.

Surf Security

Surf Security

SURF Security has transformed the browser into your strongest security asset while providing complete end-user privacy – all with full compliance.