Humans have control of military drones, but some experts think cutting the puppet strings is inevitable as forces seek to gain the upper hand in battles.
Ok.....let'ssay this goes EXACTLY as planned. Nothing wrong. No mistakes.
So these robots are marching towards a war in a formation of 50,000 robots.
And then the enemy releases their army of 50,000 robots.
They both shoot each other. Now there's 100,000 broken robots in a field. Ok, now what? What did that accomplish?
And remember, that's BEST case scenario. Where no robot malfunctions. No AI is fed garbage data. No robots are hacked. And every robot has a 1:1 kill ratio.
There's a LOT more that can go wrong, but my main question is, how do robots fighting robots in a war do anything at all?
You could replace "robots" with humans and make the same argument. 100,000 dead men in a field doesn't accomplish anything. The point is to have humans/robots left over after the fight to impose your will
Wars are won by killing the enemy and breaking their stuff. By capturing and controlling land, means of production, supply and transport lines, and so on, you impose your will on your enemy and remove the capability for them to do the same to you.
Drones will be used to destroy enemy assets, take out ground troops, and maintain control of of the above mentioned resources. You'll never just have one drone army meet another on an open field, that's not even how human soldiers fight anymore.