The Russian government appears to have harnessed artificial intelligence for a purpose so macabre it could have been lifted from a Black Mirror script: the digital resurrection of dead soldiers. UK intelligence sources have warned that families in Russia are being given AI-generated simulations of their fallen loved ones, a tactic designed not only to console but to manipulate and control the public narrative around the war in Ukraine.
These simulations, reportedly built using deep learning models trained on personal data, photographs, voice recordings, and social media activity, can generate interactive avatars that speak, move, and even express emotions in ways eerily reminiscent of the deceased. According to a leaked Whitehall assessment, the technology is being deployed in a pilot programme targeting families of soldiers killed in action. The avatars are presented via virtual reality or smartphone apps, offering grieving relatives a chance to ‘see’ their loved ones again.
But beneath the veneer of comfort lies a darker intent. UK intelligence analysts believe the programme is part of a broader psychological warfare campaign designed to suppress dissent. By providing an emotional crutch, the state can frame the war as a noble sacrifice rather than a catastrophe. Families who accept the digital ghosts may be less likely to challenge official narratives or join anti-war protests. As one MI6 source put it: ‘They aren’t just resurrecting the dead. They are weaponising grief.’
The ethical implications are staggering. Consent, for one, is impossible to obtain from the dead. The families may not be fully aware that their interactions are being monitored, their emotional responses data-mined to refine the models. This is not resurrection; it is a sophisticated form of grief-trap, where love becomes a vector for surveillance and propaganda.
From a technological perspective, the capability is real. We have already seen startups offer ‘griefbots’ that mimic deceased relatives using generative AI. China has experimented with digital ghosts for elderly care. But Russia’s state-backed deployment marks a chilling first: the use of such technology as an instrument of psychological warfare at scale.
What does this mean for the rest of us? The digital sovereignty of our memories is at stake. If a state can conjure a convincing simulacrum of your dead child, what else can it do? It can harvest your most intimate moments, reprogramme your recollection, and turn your sanctuary into a surveillance chamber. The user experience of society just got a lot darker.
We must ask ourselves: Where is the off switch? As quantum computing accelerates AI’s ability to mimic human warmth, the line between memory and manipulation blurs. The UK’s warning is not just about Russia. It is a red flag for every nation rushing headlong into the age of artificial intimacy without guardrails.
In the end, the real casualty may be trust itself. When the dead can be faked, the living lose their anchor. We need a global framework for digital necromancy, one that prioritises human dignity over state control. Until then, every interaction with an avatar may be a ghost we cannot exorcise.










