Connect with us

Technology

Russia setting up first military unit with killer ‘robot tanks’ boasting 30mm guns, missiles and FLAMETHROWERS

THE Russian military has announced that it is lining up its first unit featuring robot tanks.

The remotely piloted machines, called Uran-9, can be armed with machine guns, flamethrowers and anti-tank missiles.

Russia has spent years developing its Uran-9 robotic tank

They’ll work alongside troops to assist combat, carry out reconnaissance and offer fire support.

It comes as tensions between the US President Joe Biden and Russian leader Vladimir Putin escalate over the Ukraine crisis.

Putin is amassing forces on the frontiers of its neighbouring country, a move that has led calls from Biden to stand down or risk retribution.

According to the state-run TASS news agency, Russia’s Defense Minister, Sergei Shoigu, inspected the unmanned Uran-9 tanks on Friday.

A Russian Uran-9 unmanned armoured reconnaissance and infantry support vehicle is seen during the Victory Day Parade in 2018

The inspection took place at the 766th Production and Technological Enterprise in Nakhabino near Moscow where the vehicles are developed and manufactured.

Plans are now in motion to incorporate the tanks into army units after they were previously deployed in Syria.

“An experimental unit is being established on the premises of one of the Defence Ministry’s scientific research centers,” Russia’s Defence Ministry said.

“This center will subsequently train personnel that will operate Uran-9 strike robotic vehicles in operational military units.”

The remotely piloted machines can be armed with machine guns, flamethrowers and anti-tank missiles

The Uran-9 is powered by a diesel-electric motor and has a top speed of 22 miles per hour (35 kph).

It is remotely piloted by an operator in a mobile vehicle no more than 1.8 miles away.

That operator can either control the vehicle manually on set it on a pre-determined path.

The eventual goal is to develop artificial intelligence that can control the vehicle without intervention from an operator.

Russia showcased an AI-controlled mini tank in a 2019 video
Advanced Research Fund

The 12-ton robot is kitted out with Ataka guided weapons, anti-tank missiles, Shmel-M flamethrowers, and a 7.62mm machine gun.

At least one Uran-9 was deployed and tested in the Syrian Civil War in 2018, though it is unclear if it ever participated in combat.

The trial didn’t work out, and after a month on the field the Kremlin admitted the unmanned ground vehicle wasn’t ready for regular front-line use.

It’s one of a number of killer robots in development by the Russian military.

The killer vehicle is heavily armed
Advanced Research Fund

The Kremlin has also said it is working on swarms of automated quadrocopter drones that bombard targets with explosives.

“We expect to continue expanding the range of robots, which, of course, are already in demand in the military today,” Russia’s defense minister Sergei Shoigu said last week.

“These will be heavy robots (for mine clearance) and everything related to the further development of scouts, radiation and chemical reconnaissance robots.”

The US, China and France are also developing tanks that can acquire targets and move using artificial intelligence.

drones
Advanced Research Fund

Russia is also working on drones that can fly in formation and drop explosives on targets[/caption]

It’s got tech boffins worried that AI will one day spell the end for the human race.

Some have called for bans on technology that can fire their weapons at a human target without the final say of an operator.

In 2019, billionaire Bill Gates warned that the threat AI poses to humanity is similar to that of nuclear weapons.

He said intelligent machines have the potential to both save and destroy the human race.

The tank can track the line of sight of its handler
Advanced Research Fund


Super-strong robots that “make the Terminator look puny” are already on the way.

Criminal gangs and terrorists could one day buy killer robot assassins on the black market.

And here’s how the Ancient Greeks predicted killer robots, driverless cars and even Amazon Alexa speakers.

Are you worried about killer robots? Let us know in the comments!


We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online news team? Email us at tips@the-sun.co.uk or call 0207 782 4368 . We pay for videos too. Click here to upload yours.