King Arik Coyotus-I of Canissia had returned from Vulpesia feeling refreshed and relaxed, enjoying his brief time off. It had been particularly entertaining watching his own assistants and those of General Sanguinius engage in numerous rounds of beach volleyball... but duty called.
"Ahh, military exercises," the King said with a sigh, "Crosshairs '09. We shall include the Canissian Marines." He signed off on the order and went on to the next. "Mmm," he said, concern in his voice, "Terrorism... piracy... odd, considering this world started with stability and resources..." He wondered if this was something endemic to human society and psyche.
"The news is grim, Excellency," Colonel Rassnar said, bring this King his breakfast.
"Indeed. We've managed to stay out of it, but how long? I cannot help but think that, even given as near-perfect a situation as one could ask for, humans just insist on
creating reasons for conflict."
"Conflict defines us, Excellency," the Colonel volunteered, "Given a perfect situation, without boundaries, may be too unnerving for a social animal adapted to the demands of danger for survival."
"Very astute, Colonel, I think you have something there." Arik folded up the reports and put the folder on the table as he dug into his morning chow.
"There is the increase in disease across the Strait, too," Arik mentioned, "The Red Technocracy-- encephalitis, I believe? How are we doing on that?"
"Every rainy season brings an increase in disease," the Colonel said, "So far we've done well enough, but there has been an increase in hospital visits, and there's the usual scramble to make sure there's sufficient vaccines. But it is within the health budget."
"Good," Arik said, sipping at his coffee, "Looks like our robotics program is coming along well."
"It recives a lot of support from research universities, sir," the Colonel said, "University-age students see robotics as an alternative to enacting a conscription law, so they are quite eager for its success."
"You know," Arik said, "There are those that say that a time in the service is good for citizenship."
"True," the Colonel said. He knew the King was engaging in some Devil's Advocate style banter, as a ways of addressing things. "But we do have the national service initiative which creates a sense of shared community-- and it seems to be sufficient. Bearing arms for the state is not the only, or most necessary path to this."
"Yeah," the King said, "Yeah, I agree. Still, it is an easy way to boost manpower... eh, we'll stick with the 'bots. We just have to make sure we don't get too cocky about jumping into things just because we have 'bots..."
CANISSIAN ROBOT PROGRAM CONTINUES TO MAKE STRIDES

Anti-aircraft robot read for field tests.
FORT GAROU-- Colonel William Axman continues to wax enthusiastic about the Canissian military's expanding robot program.
"With more robots, we can maintain readiness without having to resort ot conscription," he said, "Allowing more workers to remain in the economy. A win-win situation."
When asked about the per-unit-cost of building a robot, as opposed to the idea of a adult volunteer that simply walks into a recruiting station, Axman insisted that the whole spectrum of costs has to be looked at, and in a more detailed examination, the cost-benefits ration becomes more apparant.
"A human walks into the office and he's 'free of charge', but he's not a soldier yet," Axman said, "He has to be trained and equipped, fed, housed... a robot is purpose built and programmed, and needs only a recharging station, not three hots and a cot."
Colonel Axman also went on to explain that a robot can stand guard all night, and doesn't need creature comforts to sustain fighting spirit.
"They just roll into battle, ready to go," Axman said.

Experimental armored car undergoing terrain tests.
"The idea is not to
replace the soldier," King Arik Coyotus-I said in a prepared statement earlier today, "But to
enhance the soldier's range of abilities. I know from experience that one thing that always needs to be done is convoy escort duty, and commanders are always needing people to man gun trucks to take supplies through dangerous areas. These are long, tiring missions, and susceptible to ambush," he explained, drawing on his own experience in war while on Earth That Was.
"What we want is a command structure wherem for example, there is a convoy commander vehicle that serves as a sort of 'node' for four or five automated armored cars. These robo-cars follow the command car, using their artificial intelligence to adjust themselves to the convoy based on mission requirements, expected threat, terrain, and traffic."

The "Ripsaw" robo-tank: the shape of things to come?
The automated vehicles would be able to react immediately while the flesh-and-blood soldiers would have time to put together a more coherent and appropriate response to danger.
The critical factor is judgement-- trying to program the "shoot/no-shoot" paramaters to cover every possible scenario, and have a processing speed for the AI that allows these parameters to be used fast enough to make a decision without the computer having to "think" about it.
"If anything, we're going to be overly-careful," Colonel Axman assured, "If there's any doubt, the 'bot will hold fire, and wait to see where the humans fire, and then add their firepower to the fray. Better safe than not!"