In this conversation-style episode of The New Sentinel, Chukwuka is joined by Major Ethan “Sentinel” Graves, Duke Johnson, and Olga Ivanova for a hard-hitting roundtable on how artificial intelligence is transforming modern warfare. Drawing on their military experience and human rights background, the hosts debate AI-driven decision-making on the battlefield, from autonomous drones and predictive targeting to the Pentagon and DARPA’s push for faster, smarter operations.
They examine the promises and risks of AI: fewer friendly-fire incidents and better protection for troops versus frightening possibilities when code fails at combat speed. The panel digs into oversight gaps, the reality of "human in the loop" claims, and whether accountability can keep pace with battlefield algorithms.
The discussion then widens to the global AI arms race, with China, NATO, and other powers scrambling for an edge, and explores how military technologies spill over into mass surveillance, smart borders, and predictive policing. Throughout, the team wrestles with the core tension between security and freedom, asking whether it’s possible to field cutting-edge AI tools while still defending civil liberties and human rights.
This episode keeps the feel of an unfiltered, in-studio conversation—no lectures, just veterans and a rights advocate clashing, agreeing, and challenging each other on what AI means for the future of war and democracy.