The Pentagon opened military AI locks and handed out contracts worth up to $800 million to four biggest names: Google, Openai, Anthropic and Elon Musk’s Xai. Each company has scored shots for $200 million worth of work.
“We’re excited to announce that we’re a great deal,” said Dr. Doug Matty, Digital Chief and AI Executive. “The adoption of AI is transforming the department’s ability to support fighter jets and maintain a strategic advantage over the enemy.
“Utilizing off-the-shelf solutions in an integrated functional approach will accelerate the use of advanced AI as part of intelligence, business and enterprise information systems as part of the essential tasks of joint missions in the Warfighting domain.”
The pentagon plays it wisely by not putting all the eggs in one basket. Instead of choosing one winner, they are creating competition among top players in the hopes of ensuring the best AI solutions available to the military and the wider government.
As the announcement fell, Mask’s Xai rolled out “Grok for Government,” a special version of AI specially designed for use by public institutions. This follows similar government initiatives for Openai and humanity.
Xai’s new government suite promises everything from the latest Grok 4 models to “deep search” and “tool use.” They plan to get security clearance for engineers and even make AI work in classification environments.
The company is clearly trying to position itself as a patriotic choice, talking about “maintaining American leadership in technological innovation” and “turning shovels into tokens.”
But do you remember when Grok completely off the rails and started talking about “Mechahitler”? That’s exactly what makes people nervous about using AI for serious government jobs and even military purposes.
When dealing with national security, you can’t suddenly vent strange alternative history or create things to your AI assistant. The stakes are too high. It’s like hiring someone to help with an important decision, but sometimes they just start talking about nonsense.
The entire transaction shows how seriously the government takes AI. They consider it essential to stay competitive. A partnership with the General Services Bureau means that federal agencies can leverage these AI tools and allow everyone from the FBI to the Department of Agriculture to participate.
The pentagon is basically high stakes experiments. By working with multiple AI companies, they bet on making the most of the world, avoiding the risk of relying on a single provider. This is a sensible strategy, but it means you need to figure out how to manage all these different systems and make sure they actually work together.
The actual test is whether these AI tools can provide government and military promises without the embarrassing glitches that have plagued some of these systems in the past. When it comes to national security, there is no room for AI with a “mechahitler” moment.
reference: Google’s open Medgemma AI model could transform healthcare
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