Afterword

By |2026-05-11T13:36:59-10:00May 11, 2026|Categories: Feller, Edge|Tags: , , , , , , , , , |

The central ethical risk of military AI is not machine autonomy but human abdication: the tendency to treat algorithmic speed, confidence scores, and procedural validation as insulation from responsibility in war. Examining autonomy, remote warfare, cyber operations, and biotechnology, the chapter argues that preserving the warrior ethos in machine-age warfare requires leaders to retain the burden of command while building accountability, epistemic competence, and structural safeguards that keep responsibility inseparable from authority.

Preface

By |2026-05-11T13:17:39-10:00May 11, 2026|Categories: Edge|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |

The Indo-Pacific security architecture is undergoing its most significant transformation since the end of the Second World War. As the United States and its partners navigate this era of competitive multipolarity, the requirement for rigorous strategic assessment of military and national power has never been greater. America’s Strategic Edge: Deterrence, Lethality, and Warrior Ethos in the Indo-Pacific seeks to provide that assessment by examining the interconnected pillars that sustain America’s strategic edge and regional stability.

Foreword

By |2026-05-11T13:14:59-10:00May 11, 2026|Categories: Edge|Tags: , , , , , , , , , |

The Indo-Pacific is the gravitational center of global security in the twenty-first century. Home to the world’s most dynamic economies and vital sea lanes, it is also a landscape defined by rapid military modernization, contested domains, and intensifying competition. Preserving peace depends not only on credible military advantage, but on disciplined leadership and ironclad partnerships that uphold regional stability.

Responsibility in Machine-Age Warfare

By |2026-05-12T10:17:30-10:00May 11, 2026|Categories: Feller, Edge|Tags: , , , , , , , , , |

The central ethical risk of military AI is not machine autonomy but human abdication: the tendency to treat algorithmic speed, confidence scores, and procedural validation as insulation from responsibility in war. Examining autonomy, remote warfare, cyber operations, and biotechnology, the chapter argues that preserving the warrior ethos in machine-age warfare requires leaders to retain the burden of command while building accountability, epistemic competence, and structural safeguards that keep responsibility inseparable from authority.

Organizing Power

By |2026-05-11T12:33:36-10:00May 11, 2026|Categories: Kunce, Edge|Tags: , , , , , , , , |

Resilience in the twenty-first century depends less on raw technological superiority than on a nation’s ability to organize power coherently, legitimately, and at speed across government, the military, industry, and society under sustained pressure. Through a comparative analysis of democratic resilience and China’s military-civil fusion model, the chapter argues that the United States must strengthen whole-of-society coordination and public-private integration to preserve legitimacy, maintain escalation control, and sustain strategic advantage during prolonged competition.

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