Abstract
Scholars have observed that AI image generators often produce racist and sexist results. In fact, AI systems have been shown not only to reproduce common racial stereotypes but sometimes to amplify biases present in the real world. Overall, images created by AI often include biased and stereotypical traits related to gender, skin color, occupations, nationalities, and more. However, scholars have yet to examine how AI imaging technologies and the stereotypes they rely on connect to their militaristic roots. From their beginnings in the US Pentagon’s Cold War efforts against Communism, AI technologies have been consistently linked to America’s pursuit of mastering the dark military art of counter-insurgency. This article will explore the ongoing role of AI by demonstrating how AI image generation tools produce images that reinforce the principles of Western strategic thinking, especially the dominant doctrine of modern irregular warfare: counter-insurgency. Using a sample of 20 images, we will show that AI image generators enhance tropes related to targeting Black male militants in the US and depict sexual stereotypes that assume the benevolence and superiority of Western society—particularly the US—in promoting gender equality among non-Western and formerly colonized populations, while also portraying the protection or liberation of Black and Brown women from the threat of their ‘barbaric’ male counterparts.