Pentagon seeks $2.3 billion for Maven AI battlefield system 

The Pentagon is asking Congress for $2.3 billion over the next five years to expand its Maven Smart System, a platform developed by Palantir Technologies that has eased the integration of artificial intelligence into frontline military operations.

The funding request, outlined in fiscal year 2027 budget documents released April 21, would support both the Maven data platform and a related "joint fires network" designed to connect battlefield intelligence directly to weapons systems across the armed services.

The proposal represents a notable increase for the program. Last year, Maven-related work was funded at nearly $1.3 billion through 2029.

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Maven Smart System traces its roots to Project Maven, launched in 2017 to accelerate the military's adoption of artificial intelligence. Initially focused on analyzing drone and surveillance imagery, the effort has expanded into a broader platform that ingests and processes data from satellites, radar, and other sensors to identify objects and potential threats in near real time.

Control of Maven's geospatial intelligence functions shifted in 2022 to the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, which manages satellite imagery and related data streams. But the system's reach has since extended well beyond intelligence analysis.

By pairing Maven with a joint fires network, the Pentagon is linking AI-generated insights to units operating artillery, aircraft, naval systems and other strike assets.

That shift reflects a change in how the military is approaching artificial intelligence. Earlier efforts centered on intelligence collection and analysis. Maven's expansion shows AI is moving closer to operational decision-making and targeting.

Palantir has contracts for the Maven system with the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, as well as software licensing contracts across the Army, Navy, Air Force and Space Force.

Analysts at the investment firm William Blair, citing discussions with military users, said the system has gained traction inside the services. "Maven Smart System is now being used as the DoD's primary battlefield command-and-control, targeting, and situational awareness platform," the firm wrote April 22 in a note to investors.

The analysts added that the new funding request marks the first time Maven has been highlighted as a core budget priority, rather than a niche or experimental effort. They noted that Maven funding is likely part of a $10 billion indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract vehicle awarded to Palantir last year.

The Pentagon's 2027 budget proposal includes an estimated $58.5 billion tied to artificial intelligence. The budget documents say AI is transitioning "from scattered projects to a unified national security approach" as the U.S. seeks to compete in what officials characterize as an emerging AI arms race.

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Veröffentlicht: 2026-04-24 08:40

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