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Nations meet at UN for 'killer robot' talks as regulation lags

Date: May 13, 2025

Countries have met at the United Nations (UN) on Monday to revive efforts to regulate the kinds of artificial intelligence (AI)-controlled autonomous weapons increasingly used in modern warfare.

This is, as experts warn, time is running out to put guardrails on new lethal technology.

Autonomous and AI-assisted weapons systems are already playing a greater role in conflicts from Ukraine to Gaza. And rising defence spending worldwide promises to provide a further boost for burgeoning AI-assisted military technology.

Progress towards establishing global rules governing their development and use, however, has not kept pace. And internationally binding standards remain virtually non-existent.

Since 2014, countries that are part of the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW) have been meeting in Geneva to discuss a potential ban on fully autonomous systems that operate without meaningful human control and regulate others.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has set a 2026 deadline for states to establish clear rules on AI weapon use. But human rights groups warn that consensus among governments is lacking.

Alexander Kmentt, Head of Arms Control at Austria's Foreign Ministry, said that it must quickly change.

"Time is really running out to put in some guardrails so that the nightmare scenarios that some of the most noted experts are warning of don't come to pass," he told Reuters.

Monday's gathering of the UN General Assembly in New York will be the body's first meeting dedicated to autonomous weapons.

Though not legally binding, diplomatic officials want the consultations to ramp up pressure on military powers that are resisting regulation due to concerns that the rules could dull the technology's battlefield advantages.

Campaign groups hope the meeting, which will also address critical issues not covered by the CCW, including ethical and human rights concerns and the use of autonomous weapons by non-state actors, will push states to agree on a legal instrument.

They view it as a crucial litmus test on whether countries can bridge divisions ahead of the next round of CCW talks in September.

--Reuters--

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