Stopping killer robots and other future threats
Only twice in history have nations come together
to ban a weapon before it was ever used. In 1868, the Great Powers agreed under
the Saint Petersburg Declaration to ban exploding bullets, which by spreading
metal fragments inside a victim’s body could cause more suffering than the
regular kind. And the 1995 Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons now has 104 signatories, who have agreed
to ban the weapons on the grounds that they could cause excessive suffering to
soldiers in the form of permanent blindness.
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