China’s ‘Red Eye’ Military AI: Eyes on the Future of Air Combat
Imagine fighter aircraft battling across the sky, where split-second decisions aren’t left to a human pilot but to a sophisticated algorithm that can see the invisible. This is the promise of ‘Red Eye,’ China’s latest military AI system.
Developed by the Northwest Institute of Mechanical & Electrical Engineering, under the umbrella of Norinco, this technology has the potential to redefine aerial combat capabilities.
As AI’s capabilities expand, its power lies in its ability to transcend human limits. Red Eye embodies this vision.
In simulations detailed in the December 2024 Journal of Gun Launch & Control, this Chinese AI demonstrated its capabilities against a complex F-15 fighter jet,
To understand Red Eye’s disruptive potential, consider this scenario: an F-15 dives, deploys munitions, and then initiates a sharp ascent. Red Eye uses advanced optical sensors to detect the slightest deformation in the F-15’s control surfaces, anticipating trajectory shifts within milliseconds. The result? Game over.
What sets Red Eye apart is its unique approach. Using a modified YOLOv8 neural network, it analyzes the physical mechanics of its adversary’s control surfaces through infrared imagery. Red Eye watches control surfaces bend and flex, reading the intent signaled by minor movements of metal before a maneuver even unfolds. This moves from predicting where an aircraft is going to determining what it is about to do. In simulations, it has overcome human unpredictability.
Some might question the relevance in the era of long-range, beyond-visual-range combat. However, Red Eye’s capabilities remain significant. When stealth aircraft face each other, potentially in an active electronic warfare environment where sensors might be blinded, close-quarters combat is still a possibility. In addition, AI pilots can operate on any platform, from the largest bomber to the smallest missile, providing maneuvering capabilities that might be adapted for beyond visual range missiles.
AI models like Red Eye are ideal for loyal wingmen drones. Red Eye isn’t China’s first foray into autonomous air combat.
This system is likely destined for stealthy platforms like China’s J-20 and the loyal wingmen it flies with, such as the FH-97A.
In the race to autonomous fighter aircraft control, China is on a different path.
Where known Western systems have relied on trajectory data and probabilistic models, Red Eye’s infrared control surface monitoring offers a new approach.
The implications extend beyond the cockpit. Red Eye’s autonomy—its ability to decide, react, and dominate without a human in the loop—heralds a shift in warfare.
Here, we see it in action. A human pilot blinks; Red Eye doesn’t. A human hesitates; Red Eye acts. A human pilot specializes at a few sets of missions. Red Eye could do it all. A military pilot tires… If the technology proves successful, it may not be limited to human assistance. It can rapidly lead to mass replacement.
Critics will raise ethical questions. An AI that surpasses human pilots raises fundamental questions. Who is accountable? What happens when things go wrong? How do we constrain a system that learns from every move? The progress of these military autonomy technologies appears to outpace the theoretical considerations of ethicists.
There are lessons here for business leaders, technologists, and policymakers: AI’s frontier is operational, measurable, and—right now—is advancing rapidly. The U.S. has the talent and the vision, but capability requires scale, speed and a willingness to rethink the game. Red Eye may be China’s triumph and a wake-up call for America. The future is here. Are we ready?