Western IT environment enters final phase of militarization — expert
"A new defense technology consortium is being formed in the US under the auspices of the Pentagon to focus on research into military artificial intelligence," Alexander Stepanov said
MOSCOW, December 13. /TASS/. The creation of an industrial consortium by US companies indicates that the militarization of the Western information-technological environment is entering its final phase, Alexander Stepanov, a military expert, program director of the Academy of Political Sciences, senior researcher at the Institute of Latin America of the Russian Academy of Sciences, has told TASS.
In a joint statement on December 7, Anduril Industries and Palantir announced the establishment of a consortium with the aim of accelerating the pace of artificial intelligence deployment in the military sphere.
"A new defense technology consortium is being formed in the US under the auspices of the Pentagon to focus on research into military artificial intelligence. The consortium’s leaders are Palantir and Anduril, which have already de facto joined the US military-industrial complex in the process of solving problems on the information and robotics track respectively. As a result, we see a major US technological consortium contracted by the military and the obvious reorientation of US IT giants to the production of military products. The militarization of the Western information technology environment is entering its final phase," Stepanov believes.
He pointed out that Palantir is a developer of data analysis software. Its digital data collection and processing tool, the Gotham platform, is a key product for the US military, security and intelligence community. On May 30, the US Department of Defense awarded Palantir a $480-million contract to develop the Maven Smart System, a target identification system for the US military that uses AI algorithms and machine vision to improve the speed and efficiency of automatic target identification, including for drones, Stepanov recalled.
"On this basis, collaboration with Anduril - a key Pentagon contractor for the development and production of various types of autonomous systems for different environments - looks logical and obvious. The more so, since both entities have A similar origin. Peter Thiel - a co-founder of PayPal and Palantir, a well-known libertarian - once backed a startup of Palmer Luckey - the founder of Anduril - through a venture capital fund, making it the Pentagon's fastest-growing technology cluster. Alongside drones, the company is developing a wide range of cruise missiles, and air defense, communications and radio-electronic warfare systems," the expert added.
Collaboration aims
The task of the new consortium is to create a single unified digital ecosystem using AI to solve a wide range of military tasks. Stepanov believes that the application of the global platform for collecting and analyzing targeted intelligence is primarily focused on remote control of groups of combat autonomous systems within the concept of multi-domain operations. The two-year program is an extended version of the Titan project. Palantir's role is to create basic software designed to support decision-making by military units’ commanders in a highly dynamic combat environment and mass application of various types of drones - reconnaissance and attack ones.
The program is paired with the Pentagon's key initiative for transition to the mass use of Replicator robotic systems. The first phase is to be completed by August 2025 with the adoption of a thousand small, network-integrated drones.
"The goal of the collaboration is to overcome two key challenges: the lag in the decision-making process during the data collection and target identification phase, and the lack of a secure data transmission channel amid radio-electronic warfare and unstable software crypto-resilience. To solve the latter problem, the team plans to use AIP to create a cloud-based data management system capable of provide information of all secrecy levels for different consumers," Stepanov added.
According to his sources Anduril plans to join forces with OpenAI's ChatGPT to employ their AI algorithms to improve the US army’s capabilities to defend itself from drones.