CYAIMay 24

Beyond Killer Robots: General AI Attitudes and Public Support for Military AI in Nine Countries

arXiv:2605.2519644.7
AI Analysis

For policymakers and military organizations, this reveals that public opinion is conditionally permissive, with opposition concentrated on fully autonomous lethal force, rather than broad rejection of military AI.

This study examines public support for military AI across nine countries, finding that general positive attitudes toward AI and hawkish foreign-policy orientations are strong predictors of support, while principled opposition to lethal autonomy is limited to fully autonomous lethal force scenarios. Perceived AI risks are unexpectedly associated with higher support.

AI-enabled military systems are a fixture of modern military conflict. Applications vary from autonomous drones for surveillance and attack to AI-supported target selection. The importance of AI for modern conflict shows also in public disputes between governments and technology companies over the conditions for military access to frontier AI. Both military uses and government attempts at enabling and steering them happen before a backdrop of public opinion, yet we still know little about how people think about military AI. Drawing on a preregistered survey of 9,000 respondents in nine countries, including China, Germany, and the United States, we examine whether support for military AI is shaped primarily by general attitudes toward AI, principled opposition to lethal autonomy, or foreign-policy and geopolitical orientations. Across six military AI scenarios that vary in lethality and human control, respondents who view AI as beneficial are substantially more supportive of military AI. Hawkish respondents are also more supportive. By contrast, principled opposition to lethal autonomy is not broadly associated with the full index but is related to the application of fully autonomous lethal force. Contrary to our expectation, perceived AI risks are positively associated with support. Cross-national differences are moderate and broadly consistent with geopolitical context. Overall, public opinion toward military AI appears conditionally permissive. Publics are not categorically opposed to various military uses of AI. Instead, unease is concentrated around fully autonomous lethal force.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes