tv Sophie Co RT August 1, 2014 2:29am-3:01am EDT
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hello and welcome just sophie and co i'm sophie shevardnadze jody williams embarked on a crusade against landmines in the early ninety's with few people behind her within several years sir motorists and g.a.o. had grown into a cloak spanning network landmines where international are banned and she was awarded a nobel peace prize now she is on a different mission and killer robots are her target she is our guest today.
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from speeders to guns from chariots to tanks humanity stops at nothing to invent new ways to kill. and with drones already making pilots history driblets are on their way this this is something finite may coming to life. isn't done but the mercy of machines and what does it say to stand up and stop it before it's too late . now i guess today is jody williams political activist and a winner of the noble peace prize jodie it's so great to have you on our show so you work to get it thank you for inviting me yeah so you work to get lend lines bands and that want new and noble peace prize now you're targeting what you call the killer robots fully autonomy's weapons tell us more about them for those who don't
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know what they are in simple words sure i think when we say killer robots most people think of drones but killer robots are weapons the would make drones look primitive at least with the drone there is a human being who looks at a computer screen sees the target and pushes the buttons to fire the missiles and kill various militaries are doing research on weapons that would have no human being involved in the targeting and killing of human beings and we found that shocking and horrifying that people are really thinking it is ok to give the right to target and kill human beings to machines so these things haven't been used yet right tell me what tell me more correct. but there are many many
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precursors to kill what we call killer robots the u.s. for example is testing the x. forty seven b. which is a you know a subsonic super drone as it is called the u.k. is testing the turan this european countries under france are testing the neuro on china has just tested its own stealth drone we're not quite certain about what russia is testing but i do know that russia and now it's in twenty thirteen that they would be opening a military bro but center in twenty fourteen and there are prototypes from this from the stealth drones all the way downed to micro robots which are the size of a mosquito that could fly into a room and either do surveillance or fly into a room and you know inject
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a toxin and kill the target and it's very frightening that people think this is ok but one it's still take a human being to actually switch it on and direct it one way or another it would take the robot to be programmed but once it was set free it would proceed to make the target thing and kill decisions unless our campaign to stop killer robots is able to make certain that human beings have to be involved meaningfully in the kill decision just because before we get into the horror whole moral side of the story i want to know a little more about the technicalities so are this things and controllable one stair put in action or can you actually stop them reverse a action bring them back. that we don't know yet because as you point out these are still in the prototype and testing phase robotic scientists
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some of whom are part of our campaign talk often about what would happen if a squadron for example of stealth killer drones were set free and they were hacked just like computer hackers hack into you know computer systems there is no saying that they couldn't hack into a killer drone squadron and said it a mark who then is responsible for the killings by the killer robots is it the programmer of. is it the commander somehow in charge of the squadron is it the person who programmed the robot is it the producer of the robot in international law there has to be a direct chain of command and accountability that is another part of this that makes it ethically. unsound morally reprehensible quite frankly now lend
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mines were banned after many people suffered will you be taken seriously considering that there have been no victims get we have been taken seriously which is one of the amazing things about this sophie we only launched the campaign to stop killer robots in april of this year this year being twenty thirty and with the end seven months which is now the international community is going to be taking up the question here in geneva next may i think it is in a four day long meeting on killer robots and it will be governments of the world under the umbrella of the convention on conventional weapons here in geneva who will be addressing this issue and we're hoping they will go further and we will
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continue a dialogue to lead to a new international instrument that would prohibit you know fully autonomous killer robots so it's not it's not something that we're being ridiculed for anymore although you're correct when we first used the term killer robots some people said we're using scare tactics not true we want to guess we want to capture public attention which means you use language that makes people stop and think but immediately military started responding to us showing clearly that we are not making things up this is not science fiction and i wish it were to be quite honest with you jenny i'm just wondering have you personally had a chance to talk to people directly to people who are making this autonomy's weapons do they actually consider the dangers of what they're building. well i
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haven't spoken to them yet myself but i intend to. they are they are aware there is an increasingly robust dialogue about this especially among lawyers as you can imagine on both sides of the argument the the anti killer robot side saying that it international law as it stands now cannot fully deal with this new technology and the others on the side that believe fully autonomous weapons are you know the best thing after sliced bread argue that they're a good thing and international law can deal with them and all we need is best practices. but when the united states which is the only country to have done so so far produced its military directive on drone research not drone i'm sorry killer robot research they actually listed
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a very long series of concerns that need to be looked at in terms of killer robots so even the u.s. military which has long considered that killer robots are inevitable and will be part of the us military force recognizes these are very problematic and we intend to amplify that if you will but so what do you say to those who argue that autonomy systems are in our future it's an irreversible process and if government's done used them in a regulated way they wail and being used by rebel groups and non-government actors know because rebel groups and non-government actors could never produce them on their own unless high tech militaries like the united states israel south korea china russia unless those militaries and the so-called defense industries produce of them rebel groups don't have the capacity what we are. trying
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to do is a preemptive ban as was done with blinding laser weapons for example back in one nine hundred ninety five or ninety six they were preemptively banned we need to do this with killer robots and we're not against robots we are against weaponized fully autonomous robots that have the kill decision over human beings it's quite shocking that people think that's ok. ok i get you benny preemptively i think it's a great goal but does your complain include semi-autonomous missions like drones no it's not that there there are members of our campaign that work on drones but the legal rationale for drones and for killer robots is different and we wanted to be very clear that we were preemptively dealing with a future system that is under research and development let's not imagine that
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there's somewhere in the far distant future they are on our immediate horizon unless we stop them dealing with drones is a is as i said a very different legal approach to try to blend the two would make it a very difficult campaign to be quite honest and we don't believe the killer robots are inevitable nothing is inevitable except death and we intend to stop them ok well if you take apart from the killer robots i just want to know your personal take on them can the use of drones to carry out attacks be morally justified is it ok. i am personally morally and ethically offended by the use of drones in fact i was doing research for an article i was writing on the cia the us military the mercenary forces they employ and the use
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of drones and its illegality under many circumstances because i found them morally reprehensible and i think that the fact that these weapons can fly semi autonomous lee for seven thousand miles to you know the locations where unfortunately my military and the cia are attacking people in countries with which we are not at war. it to me is simply horrifying and as many you know already argue it's a violation of international law and it's assassination i do not support assassination by my government period judy we're going to take a short break now but when will they are back we're going to talk a little bit more about drones and who deserves the noble peace prize we'll be back with jody williams accidents the noble peace prize winner stay with us folks.
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crosstalk rules in effect that means you can jump in anytime you want. the serious effects of the trying to clear. the people are going to make news to get much more interesting changing every minute. not me no laughter no weapons. like the pain. in this society all. these cases most elite lives. sometimes for nothing. it's not just a story it's still being just everything you see be
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do we speak your language for those. programs and documentaries in arabic it's all here on. reporting from the world toxic. six of your p. interviews in tribute story are you. arabic to find out more visit or a big. clean . zero casualties war this is the great fantasy of war mongering politicians. capturing people is this what you do if they're innocent killing them easy we were serve the right to kill any person anywhere any time. because you don't listen to the camp drones let's these things every. politician
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get a new kind of power via their star knowledge that is very tempting. and we're back with jody williams a noble peace prize winner and a political activist so we're talking about drones right before the break you know a break where you know many would argue that sophisticated weapons like drones despite all its disadvantages are still better than humans at locating targets plus the life of the pilot is safe you know others argue that such weapons that remove a human being from actual military action make it easier for
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a country to go to war. i believe firmly that too many countries already find it easy to go to war we do not need weapons systems that make it easier for one country to kill people in another without having to suffer the consequences of their military actions there has been a young former drone pilot who had spoken publicly about what happened to him as a drone pilot and he was talking about people you know think that it isn't traumatic and he said that it is watched so closely watching people were run to because you can hear the coming of a drone it traumatizes entire villages and populations and watching people run to try to escape them and then be blown to smithereens as we say in english he said
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it's quite horrifying however if he were on the ground you know maybe he wouldn't make the same decision. might i worry mostly about my country because we're the country that uses drones primarily and we attack targets in yemen somalia we've attacked in libya sudan i heard that there might have been an attack in indonesia we are not at war with those countries what right do we have to assassinate people if we had to send our military in it would be a completely different story another ethical issue about drone so is that they give no quarter which is an important aspect of military engagement giving no quarter means that the enemy has no possibility of surrender. you know when they target a person and decide to blast him with the hellfire missiles they have no way to
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surrender they are just blown up. that is morally and ethically bankrupt and you know many of us are clued ingle as active duty military that is causing a huge backlash against the us and it's inspiring more so-called terrorists to take up you know a bad will against the united states of america so i mean your life has been this selfless mission all along and you want an noble peace prize and you sure as hell deserve it and many more if you ask me but do you generally believe that those people who get nobel peace prizes usually always deserve it not always certainly not. i have big issues with people in politics or political positions. where they can engage in war receiving a peace prize i think that's
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a little bit crazy saying i think i've got an advisor to the nobel peace prize. i've said it publicly many times so i won't shy from saying it now if the first start i think it is the fault of the nobel committee at that time for selecting him . nobels mr nobel's will is very clear about the terms that should be followed in selecting a recipient of the peace prize and expressions of future possibilities as mr obama was talking about in terms of nuclear disarmament expressions of the future are not terms of the will. so i think the nobel committee itself made an egregious error and when mr obama came out of the white house and said that he knew he did not deserve the peace prize i was proud of him for that moment and i wish he had continued to say therefore i cannot accept it so. there you go and i
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don't think henry kissinger ever deserved it but who do you believe deserves a peace prize that hasn't already received it oh my god i could list many. you know i happen to think that the people who wage war don't deserve the peace prize i happen to believe that the people on the ground fighting a good and i don't mean militarily fighting struggling to keep you know communities alive struggling to promote peaceful solutions in the context of war they are the ones who deserve the peace prize and i will be quite honest i have nominated attorney general of guatemala two times now for the nobel peace prize her name is cloudy a pos she is from guatemala under her. the former
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dictator of guatemala was tried and convicted of crimes against humanity war crimes genocide when he was a president and killing my in the indians in the so-called civil war in the one nine hundred eighty s. in water mala i think she deserves the peace prize she is challenging immunity and impunity which are two of the things that cause dictators and heads of state to believe that they can do whatever they want because nothing will happen to them you know if we can really attack impunity through the international criminal court for example through domestic courts like us as done in guatemala we will make a huge leap forward in dealing with war criminals and perhaps convincing future possible war criminals that they should not commit war crimes i think she is very
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deserving you see super confident in every step you make is that there is no stopping us thank god for that you have things in play have been assaulted and attacked because of your activism and you're still not scared i mean how do you put the fear aside like what keeps you go weighing every morning when you get. you know i was thinking about this the other day. because i was at a meeting of women parliamentarians and talking about women's leadership whether it's in parliament so or in companies or in activism and i was thinking about the six women who are part of the nobel women's initiative and every one of us is fearless and fierce in our belief that we can make the world a better place we are fearless and fierce in bright his indignation at injustice i mean that's what makes me move when i feel in my in my heart you
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know fire in my heart about the situation i can't not do something you know what i mean i had planned i mean back from so that's what led me to you know start pushing groups to create a campaign to stop killer robots when i learned about them i was so freaked out i was terrified totally honestly i was terrified and then i knew i had to do something to try to address this issue publicly we deserve to have global conversation about how wars are conducted in our names. i feel fierce about making sure this doesn't happen it is not inevitable what we have time just for one last question you say that worry without real action is a waste of time but what if you feel healthier i mean how can an ordinary person
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stop governments from doing whatever they're doing my dear i'm an extremely ordinary person i come from a village of one thousand two hundred people in the teeny state of vermont need there my mother nor my father finished high school. and yet they encouraged me to be what i wanted to be in the world and i went out and the first thing i did was volunteer in an organization working on the door you know if there's nothing magic about it i recently wrote a memoir of grassroots activism in which i talk about that i talk about my very you know me. poor you know family life we were rich with love and support but we didn't have money i write about the fact that i was a confused college kid like so many you know i write about the fact that i made
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mistakes in life and yet i never ve you know veered from my belief that we all have the capacity to contribute to a better world you don't have to be a full time activist like i am i somehow have the privilege of finding this path in my own life but i try to imagine if everybody in the world who really wanted a better world for us all even people they don't like if everybody just volunteered a few hours a month on whatever issues they feel passion about it doesn't have to be mine it doesn't have to be killer robots it doesn't have to be weapons it doesn't have to be i work on climate change as well but anything that makes for a better community if you volunteer. then you're empowering yourself to use we each have power and we either choose to use it or not. and i chose
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to use it and i will continue to use it until i die because i believe we all have a responsibility as well as rights and i'm exercising mine forever jody thank you so much for this wonderful interview i think you're incredible and you inspire even the most and passionate of us so keep on going for it all the way to you thanks for being with us today jody williams and a political activist a nobel peace prize winner that's all we have today folks and i'll save an explanation of so book a.
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big story extra headlines same time there's a reason they don't want you to know. now let's break the set. and unconditional cease fire between hamas and israel comes into effect brokered by the u.n. and the u.s. it's due to last for three days while the conflict has claimed more than fourteen hundred lives. latest easy to sanctions against russia targets banks oil and defense come into full force but the country's biggest bank also blacklisted by the . lawlessness and mayhem c.e.u. governments and the us evacuate citizens from libya's radicals declare an islamic emirate in the country. the u.s. considers its largest ever shipment of hellfire missiles to the iraqi government that has lost control vast oil fields to the hottest.
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