Artificial intelligence (AI) is already deeply embedded in how modern militaries sense, analyze, decide, and operate. AI is rapidly becoming foundational to defense effectiveness, from AI-assisted intelligence analysis and mission planning via predictive logistics and maintenance to autonomous platforms and battlefield decision-support systems.
This transformation is not happening in isolation. A lot of todayβs defense innovation relies on dual-use technologies, systems originally developed for civilian markets and later adapted for military applications. Commercial cloud computing, advanced chips, computer vision models, and autonomous capabilities are now central components of modern defense architectures.
In the past months, I have spoken to many start-up and tech companies engaged in developing defense and dual-use capabilities. Everyone is chasing the soaring defense market. The claim to fame of almost every company pursuing these areas is profound, modern and effective AI systems.
Are AI-driven defense systems resilient enough ?
The speed of this convergence is unprecedented. So is the question it raises: Are AI-driven defense and dual-use systems secure enough for the role they are now being asked to play?
The answer is crucial for national resilience.
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