Army launches data center to support battlefield use

Summary

Army launched a pilot data center to help commanders access military data more efficiently.

Why this matters

The new center reflects how the Army is reorganizing data for faster military decision-making and broader artificial intelligence use. Related plans for base-hosted commercial data centers could also affect local infrastructure and energy demand.

The U.S. Army launched a new data center on April 3 to help move information from military databases to commanders and soldiers, according to a Pentagon release.

The Army Data Operations Center, housed under Army Cyber Command, is part of a broader effort to integrate data and machine learning into military operations. The center is intended to help address longstanding problems with data stored in separate systems or behind different security requirements.

“We don’t have a data problem. We have a data management problem, and data becomes the ammunition that we need to provide to our senior leaders in order for them to make quick and informed decisions and gain decision dominance,” Lt. Gen. Jeth Rey, deputy chief of staff for the Army G-6, said in the release.

The center is scheduled to operate as a six-month pilot.

The Army has emphasized using data to support battlefield decisions, including targeting. Wes Bryant, a former U.S. Air Force joint terminal attack controller and Pentagon whistleblower, told Military Times that much of the military’s artificial intelligence development has focused on identifying enemy targets rather than civilian environments.

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