To me, this seems logical, in a sense.
As a human who grew up during the Cold War, nuclear conflict is horrifying.
From an AI standpoint, a nuclear strike likely has several benefits:
- It reduces friendly casualties and probably overall enemy casualties.
- It shortens conflict time.
- Reduces damage to infrastructure. (Rebuild costs)
- Is likely cheaper to deploy overall, compared to conventional weapons. This assumes the stated parameters indicate the nuclear weapons are already manufactured.
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Edit: blibble brings up good counterpoints below. I was thinking in 1945 terms, which is flawed.
Exactly. The AI just does the math based on the goals you've given it. AI would have happily nuked Hiroshima and Nagasaki because it would have estimated that doing so would save the lives of X number of US soldiers in a land invasion, and given a goal of achieving "unconditional surrender now", it wouldn't have considered that a land invasion wasn't imminently necessary and therefore killing 200,000 civilians wasn't the right moral choice.
Nuclear weapons are war deterrent, not an actual weapon unless used against a country which is not a nuclear country. Using nuclear weapons pretty much guarantees both sides will be wiped down so it most definitely nowhere near logical
Except real life is not a program, and the input data is flawed (human and machines' errors). The acceptance tests are just predictions, based on, again, fallible analyses of the flawed data from history. So many layers of errors that compound
it's not logical, at all
it more or less guarantees the other side will retaliate with nuclear weapons
at which point the likelihood of escalation to strategic nuclear strikes goes through the roof
and if that happens our current civilisation is finished