Officials at the Army’s Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC)—the major command responsible for training soldiers, developing leaders, and shaping the service’s guidelines, strategies, and concepts—are currently using the AI tool, dubbed CamoGPT, to “review policies, programs, publications, and initiatives for DEIA and report findings,” according to an internal memo reviewed by WIRED.
The memo followed Trump’s signing of a January 27 executive order titled “Restoring America’s Fighting Force,” which directed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to eliminate all Pentagon policies seen as promoting what that the commander in chief declared “un-American, divisive, discriminatory, radical, extremist, and irrational theories” regarding race and gender, a linguistic dragnet that extends as far as past social media posts from official US military accounts.
Developed last summer to boost productivity and operational readiness across the US Army, CamoGPT currently has around 4,000 users who “interact” with it on a daily basis, Captain Aidan Doyle, a CamoGPT data engineer, tells WIRED. The tool is used for everything from developing comprehensive training program materials to producing multilingual translations, with TRADOC providing a “proof of concept and demonstration” at last October’s annual Association of the United States Army conference in Washington, DC, according to Robinson.
CamoGPT isn’t the only AI chatbot in the Pentagon’s arsenal: The US Air Force’s NIPRGPT has seen extensive use among airmen since its launch in June for “summarization of documents, drafting of documents and coding assistance,” according to DefenseScoop.
Originally inspired by the public release of OpenAI’s ChatGPT in November 2022, CamoGPT is a product of the Army’s Artificial Intelligence Integration Center (AI2C), the organization formed in 2018 as part of Army Future Command to spearhead AI research and development efforts by “leveraging a soldier workforce to build experimental prototypes,” as Eric Schmitz, AI2C’s operations and intelligence portfolio lead, tells WIRED.

Add new comment