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The USS Vincennes incident
Author(s) -
Viola Vincze
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
honvédségi szemle
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2732-3226
pISSN - 2060-1506
DOI - 10.35926/hdr.2020.2.6
Subject(s) - aeronautics , missile , crew , confusion , aircrew , software deployment , tragedy (event) , politics , computer security , operations research , military aviation , incident report , engineering , aviation , history , psychology , political science , law , computer science , aerospace engineering , software engineering , psychiatry , psychoanalysis
The objective of the paper is to introduce the facts of the USS Vincennes incident in 1988 and examine how the deployment and use of an Autonomous Weapon System has influenced military decision-making in the specific case. As a result of misidentification of the contact and confusion on board, Vincennes (a Ticonderoga-class guided missile cruiser outfitted with the Aegis Combat System) fired two radar-guided missiles and shot down a civilian airliner from Iranian territorial waters (in Iranian airspace) only minutes after the airliner’s take-off. Not one from the 290 passengers and crew on board survived. Several contradictory articles have been written on the incident from legal, political and scientific vantage points and this article attempts to strip these accounts of the emotional tone and look into the facts in order to establish how personnel and machine interacted during the events that eventually led to the tragedy and how similar incidents involving AWS could be avoided.

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