Anthony King
Sociologist of war whose fieldwork shows AI changing headquarters more than the battlefield.
theoristUniversity of Warwick
Profile
Professor of War Studies at the University of Warwick. His 2025 book AI, Automation, and War: The Rise of a Military-Tech Complex argues that the popular framing of military AI — autonomous killer robots on one side, reassuring talk of humans-in-the-loop on the other — misreads what is actually happening: AI is not automating war, it is fusing intelligence and targeting data at speeds beyond human reach. The book is built on roughly a decade of fieldwork and 126 interviews with serving officers, defence-ministry officials, and the executives of the technology companies now selling into the Pentagon, Whitehall, and the Israel Defense Forces.
Why they matter
Pulls the AI-warfare debate back from speculation onto empirical ground, and reframes it as a sociological story about a new military-tech complex of software firms — Palantir, Anduril, Helsing — being woven into the operational core of Western militaries.
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Mentioned in
sociology-of-war
military-tech-complex
fieldwork
autonomous-weapons
Last researched .