The Department of Defense plans to introduce new AI models on its internal, department‑wide artificial intelligence marketplace and make them available at higher classification levels, in line with its updated procurement policy that emphasizes a “commercial‑first” approach.
Cameron Stanley, DOD’s Chief Digital and Artificial Intelligence Officer, told attendees at the AWS Summit in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday that GenAI.mil has reached a record 1.7 million users and over 100,000 custom agents, prompting the addition of further models to the platform.
“We’re looking forward to advancing, getting new models onto GenAI.mil, and exploring deployment at higher classification levels,” Stanley said. “It’s a really exciting time for generative AI in the department.”
The marketplace already hosts capabilities from SpaceX, OpenAI, Google, NVIDIA, Reflection, Microsoft, Oracle, and Amazon Web Services, all accessible at Impact Levels 6 and 7, as announced by the Pentagon in May.
OpenAI confirmed in mid‑June that its flagship ChatGPT will become eligible for controlled, unclassified information on GenAI.mil beginning in July.
A major DOD application of AI is aggregating data for warfighters to accelerate decision‑making. While well‑trained soldiers, sailors, airmen, guardians, and marines traditionally make these critical judgments, AI helps parse large volumes of data quickly.
“Human cognition is not going to be able to keep up on many battlefields,” he said. “We have successfully identified ways to accelerate the identification of relevant data so decision‑makers can act more effectively.”
Stanley noted that the addition of agentic tools for analytics includes very tight guardrails, enabling analyses that would normally require two to three human analysts across separate systems to be performed almost instantaneously, with humans managing the overall workflow.
“So instead of having six or seven systems we have to go across to make that decision—we’re now doing it instantaneously, or nearly instantaneously, with humans appropriately managing the entire workload process and actioning it from the same system that we identified the decision from,” he said.
His office aims to be a “commercial‑first organization,” placing vendors directly next to warfighters with a single focus: delivering exactly what the warfighter needs.
“We create the environment with the right tools and the right security, with the right contracts in place,” Stanley added.
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