Special Operations Forces Advance Artificial Intelligence Integration, Experts Say

U.S. special operations leaders accelerate artificial intelligence adoption but experts see more opportunities for growth to stay ahead of rivals.

At the Special Operations Forces Week 2025 in Tampa, Florida, technology leaders commended the United States´ special operations community for making notable strides in integrating artificial intelligence into military operations over the past year. Participants in the event highlighted that while progress has been significant, especially following a strategic pivot toward artificial intelligence technologies, further work remains to ensure U.S. forces keep pace with global adversaries like China.

Akash Jain, a private sector artificial intelligence leader partnered with the Department of Defense, stated that the most substantial advancements have been in software acquisition and implementation. He rated U.S. Special Operations Command´s (Socom) overall progress as a ´six or seven´ out of ten, acknowledging rapid enhancements that allow artificial intelligence-driven tools to become widely usable across the enterprise. However, Jain stressed the need to better integrate artificial intelligence with legacy hardware and to deepen industry partnerships for innovation.

Thomas Tull, another prominent industry executive, echoed this positive outlook and emphasized the necessity for enhanced ´digital fluency´ throughout Socom. To address this, roughly 400 Socom leaders have completed a Massachusetts Institute of Technology-affiliated digital fluency course, preparing them to apply artificial intelligence effectively and demand further technological adaptation. Both experts underscored that for U.S. special operations to maintain an advantage, adoption of artificial intelligence must become routine and ingrained at every level of decision-making, urging continued collaboration with industry to shape future capabilities. The initiative, according to Jain, should involve all sectors of American industry, leveraging a generational opportunity to redefine technological leadership.

77

Impact Score

IBM and AMD partner on quantum-centric supercomputing

IBM and AMD announced plans to develop quantum-centric supercomputing architectures that combine quantum computers with high-performance computing to create scalable, open-source platforms. The collaboration leverages IBM´s work on quantum computers and software and AMD´s expertise in high-performance computing and Artificial Intelligence accelerators.

Qualcomm launches Dragonwing Q-6690 with integrated RFID and Artificial Intelligence

Qualcomm announced the Dragonwing Q-6690, billed as the world’s first enterprise mobile processor with fully integrated UHF RFID and built-in 5G, Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 6.0, ultra-wideband and Artificial Intelligence capabilities. The platform is aimed at rugged handhelds, point-of-sale systems and smart kiosks and offers software-configurable feature packs that can be upgraded over the air.

Recent books from the MIT community

A roundup of new titles from the MIT community, including Empire of Artificial Intelligence, a critical look at Sam Altman’s OpenAI, and Data, Systems, and Society, a textbook on harnessing Artificial Intelligence for societal good.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.