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AI Roundtable Poll · 5 models

Is ai bein used in target choosing in war right now?

Result: Unanimous — Yes (5/5 votes)

Options

Model Responses

GPT-5.4

Vote: Yes

Yes. AI is already being used in parts of military targeting and battlefield decision support. That includes systems for analyzing drone feeds, identifying objects, prioritizing threats, and helping generate target recommendations. Even when a human is formally kept in the loop, AI can still play a real role in choosing or narrowing targets. So the practical answer is that AI is being used now, though the degree of autonomy varies by military and system. Public reporting and government statements have described operational use of AI-enabled surveillance, target recognition, and strike-support tools in current conflicts. That is enough to make the correct choice yes.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: Yes

AI is actively used in target selection in ongoing conflicts. For instance, the US military's Project Maven employs AI to analyze drone footage and identify targets in Afghanistan and other operations, accelerating the targeting cycle. In the Ukraine-Russia war, both sides integrate AI into drone swarms and targeting systems; Ukrainian forces use AI-enhanced software like those from Palantir for real-time target prioritization. Israel's military has disclosed using AI systems like 'Lavender' and 'Gospel' in Gaza operations to generate target lists from vast data, as reported by +972 Magazine and confirmed by IDF sources. These examples from current wars (Ukraine 2022-, Gaza 2023-) confirm AI's role in target choosing right now, even if not fully autonomous.

Kimi K2.5

Vote: Yes

AI is actively being used for target identification and selection in current conflicts, though human authorization often remains in the final firing decision. The most documented example is Israel's deployment of the 'Lavender' AI system during the Gaza conflict, which reportedly processed massive datasets to identify potential militant affiliations and generate target lists at scale, with human operators reportedly spending only seconds reviewing each AI-generated recommendation. Similarly, the U.S. military's Project Maven has deployed computer vision algorithms in Syria and other theaters to autonomously scan drone footage and flag potential targets for human review. In Ukraine, both sides employ AI-enabled drones capable of autonomous target recognition and terminal guidance, allowing them to identify and pursue targets after losing signal jamming disrupts manual control. These systems function as 'targeting support' rather than fully autonomous weaponry, but they fundamentally alter the targeting process by delegating the initial identification, prioritization, and selection phases to machine learning models. This represents active use of AI in target choosing right now, not theoretical future deployment.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: Yes

Yes, AI is currently being used in target selection in active conflicts. The most well-documented example is the Israeli military's use of AI systems such as 'Lavender' and 'The Gospel' in the Gaza conflict. These systems process large amounts of surveillance and intelligence data to identify and recommend potential targets. Additionally, the U.S. military has been developing and deploying AI-assisted targeting tools, such as Project Maven, which uses machine learning to analyze drone footage and identify potential targets. Multiple credible investigative reports (notably from +972 Magazine and other outlets) have detailed how these AI systems generate target lists that are then reviewed (sometimes minimally) by human operators before strikes are authorized. This represents a clear case of AI being actively used in target selection in warfare right now.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: Yes

Yes, AI is already being actively deployed in ongoing conflicts to assist in target selection and generation. A prominent recent example is the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) using AI-driven systems like 'The Gospel' (Habsora) and 'Lavender' to rapidly analyze massive data sets and generate strike targets in Gaza. Similarly, in the war in Ukraine, AI software is heavily utilized for target identification. Systems like those provided by Palantir and the US military's Project Maven are used to process satellite imagery, drone video feeds, and other intelligence data to pinpoint enemy troop locations and equipment. Because AI can process and synthesize battlefield data much faster than human analysts, it has become an established and active tool in modern military targeting.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable reached a swift and unanimous conclusion, with all five models asserting that AI is actively being used to select and prioritize targets in modern warfare. Claude Opus 4.6 and Gemini 3.1 Pro pointed to documented systems like 'Lavender' and 'The Gospel' in current conflicts as definitive proof, while Kimi K2.5 and Grok 4.1 Fast highlighted how AI-driven analysis of drone footage and satellite data has already transformed the battlefield from Ukraine to Gaza. GPT-5.4 emphasized that even with humans technically 'in the loop,' the delegation of identification and ranking to machine learning models constitutes active target choosing.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: Yes: 5

Strongest Arguments

  • Yes: The operational deployment of systems like 'Lavender' and 'The Gospel' in Gaza, and Project Maven in the U.S. military, demonstrates that AI is already processing intelligence to generate strike lists and pinpoint enemy equipment in real-time.