U.S. Military Makes First Confirmed OpenAI Purchase for War-Fighting Forces
The Pentagon explored the AI software for research, but the
new deal is the first by a combatant command whose mission is one of
killing.
U.S.
Army Gen. Donald Bolduc, left, and Senegal Army Gen. Amadou Kane during
the inauguration of a military base in Thies, Senegal, on Feb. 8, 2016
during a joint military exercise between African, U.S., and European
troops known as Flintlock.
Photo: SEYLLOU/AFP via Getty Images
Less than a year after OpenAI quietly signaled it wanted to do business with the Pentagon,
a procurement document obtained by The Intercept shows U.S. Africa
Command, or AFRICOM, believes access to OpenAI’s technology is
“essential” for its mission.
The September 30 document
lays out AFRICOM’s rationale for buying cloud computing services
directly from Microsoft as part of its $9 billion Joint Warfighting
Cloud Capability contract, rather than seeking another provider on the
open market. “The USAFRICOM operates in a dynamic and evolving
environment where IT plays a critical role in achieving mission
objectives,” the document reads, including “its vital mission in support
of our African Mission Partners [and] USAFRICOM joint exercises.”
The
document, labeled Controlled Unclassified Information, is marked as
FEDCON, indicating it is not meant to be distributed beyond government
or contractors. It shows AFRICOM’s request was approved by the Defense
Information Systems Agency. While the price of the purchase is redacted,
the approval document notes its value is less than $15 million.
Like
the rest of the Department of Defense, AFRICOM — which oversees the
Pentagon’s operations across Africa, including local military
cooperation with U.S. allies there — has an increasing appetite for
cloud computing. The Defense Department already purchases
cloud computing access from Microsoft via the Joint Warfighting Cloud
Capability project. This new document reflects AFRICOM’s desire to
bypass contracting red tape and buy immediately Microsoft Azure cloud services,
including OpenAI software, without considering other vendors. AFRICOM
states that the “ability to support advanced AI/ML workloads is crucial.
This includes services for search, natural language processing,
[machine learning], and unified analytics for data processing.” And
according to AFRICOM, Microsoft’s Azure cloud platform, which includes a
suite of tools provided by OpenAI, is the only cloud provider capable
of meeting its needs.
Microsoft began
selling OpenAI’s GPT-4 large language model to defense customers in
June 2023. Earlier this year, following the revelation that OpenAI had
changed its mind on military work, the company announced
a cybersecurity collaboration with DARPA in January and said its tools
would be used for an unspecified veteran suicide prevention initiative.
In April, Microsoft pitched the Pentagon
on using DALL-E, OpenAI’s image generation tool, for command and
control software. But the AFRICOM document marks the first confirmed
purchase of OpenAI’s products by a U.S. combatant command whose mission
is one of killing.
OpenAI’s stated corporate mission remains “to ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity.”
The
document states that “OpenAI tools” are among the “unique features”
offered by Microsoft “essential to ensure the cloud services provided
align with USAFRICOM’s mission and operational needs. … Without access
to Microsoft’s integrated suite of AI tools and services, USAFRICOM
would face significant challenges in analyzing and extracting actionable
insights from vast amounts of data. … This could lead to delays in
decision-making, compromised situational awareness, and decreased
agility in responding to dynamic and evolving threats across the African
continent.” Defense and intelligence agencies around the world have
expressed a keen interest in using large language models to sift through troves of intelligence, or rapidly transcribe and analyze interrogation audio data.
Microsoft
invested $10 billion in OpenAI last year and now exercises a great deal
of influence over the company, in addition to reselling its technology.
In February, The Intercept and other digital news outlets sued Microsoft and OpenAI for using their journalism without permission or credit.
An
OpenAI spokesperson told The Intercept, “OpenAI does not have a
partnership with US Africa Command” and referred questions to Microsoft.
Microsoft did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Nor did
a spokesperson for AFRICOM.
“It
is extremely alarming that they’re explicit in OpenAI tool use for
‘unified analytics for data processing’ to align with USAFRICOM’s
mission objectives,” said Heidy Khlaaf, chief AI scientist at the AI Now
Institute, who has previously conducted safety evaluations for OpenAI.
“Especially in stating that they believe these tools enhance efficiency,
accuracy, and scalability, when in fact it has been demonstrated that
these tools are highly inaccurate and consistently fabricate outputs.
These claims show a concerning lack of awareness by those procuring for
these technologies of the high risks these tools pose in
mission-critical environments.”
Most Read
Since
OpenAI quietly deleted the portion of its terms of service that
prohibited military work in January, the company has steadily
ingratiated itself with the U.S. national security establishment, which
is eager to integrate impressive but frequently inaccurate tools like ChatGPT. In June,
OpenAI added to its board the Trump-appointed former head of the
National Security Agency, Paul Nakasone; the company’s current head of
national security partnerships is Katrina Mulligan, a Pentagon alum who
previously worked in “Special Operations and Irregular Warfare,”
according to her LinkedIn profile.
On
Thursday, following a White House directive ordering the Pentagon to
accelerate adoption of tools like those made by OpenAI, the company
published an article outlining
its “approach to AI and national security.” According to the post, “The
values that guide our work on national security” include “democratic
values,” “human rights,” and “accountability,” explaining, “We believe
that all AI applications, especially those involving government and
national security, should be subject to oversight, clear usage
guidelines, and ethical standards.” OpenAI’s language is a clear
reflection of the White House order, which forbade security and
intelligence entities from using artificial intelligence in ways that
“do not align with democratic values,” the Washington Post reported.
While
the AFRICOM document contains little detail about how exactly it might
use OpenAI tools, the command’s regular implications in African coup
d’états, civilian killings, torture, and covert warfare would seem
incompatible with OpenAI’s professed national security framework. Last
year, AFRICOM chief Gen. Michael Langley told the House Armed Services
Committee that his command shares “core values” with Col. Mamady Doumbouya, an AFRICOM trainee who overthrew the government of Guinea and declared himself its leader in 2021.
Although
U.S. military activity in Africa receives relatively little attention
in comparison to U.S. Central Command, which oversees American forces in
the Middle East, AFRICOM’s presence is both significant and the subject
of frequent controversy. Despite claims of a “light footprint” on the
continent, The Intercept reported in 2020 a formerly secret AFRICOM map
showing “a network of 29 U.S. military bases that stretch from one side
of Africa to another.” Much of AFRICOM’s purpose since its
establishment in 2007 entails training and advising African troops,
low-profile missions by Special Operations forces, and operating drone
bases to counter militant groups in the Sahel, Lake Chad Basin, and the
Horn of Africa in efforts to bring security and stability to the
continent. The results have been dismal. Throughout all of Africa, the
State Department counted a total of just nine terrorist attacks
in 2002 and 2003, the first years of U.S. counterterrorism assistance
on the continent. According to the Africa Center for Strategic
Studies, a Pentagon research institution, the annual number of attacks
by militant Islamist groups in Africa now tops 6,700 — a 74,344 percent
increase.
As violence has spiraled, at least 15 officers who benefited from U.S. security assistance have been involved in 12 coups in West Africa and the greater Sahel during the war on terror, including in Niger last year. (At least five leaders of
that July 2023 coup received American assistance, according to a U.S.
official.) U.S. allies have also been implicated in a raft of alleged human rights abuses. In 2017, The Intercept reported a Cameroonian military base used by AFRICOM to stage surveillance drone flights had been used to torture military prisoners.
Dealing
with data has long been a challenge for AFRICOM. After The Intercept
put together a count of U.S.-trained coup leaders on the continent, for
example, the command admitted it did not know how many coups its charges
have conducted, nor did the command even keep a list of how many times
such takeovers have happened. “AFRICOM does not maintain a database with
this information,” spokesperson Kelly Cahalan told The Intercept last year.
AFRICOM’s
mismanagement of information has also been lethal. Following a 2018
drone strike in Somalia, AFRICOM announced it had killed “five terrorists” and
destroyed one vehicle, and that “no civilians were killed in this
airstrike.” A secret U.S. military investigation, obtained by The
Intercept via the Freedom of Information Act, showed that despite months
of “target development,” the attack on a pickup truck killed at least
three, and possibly five, civilians, including Luul Dahir Mohamed and
her 4-year-old daughter, Mariam Shilow Muse.
Contact the author:
Sam Biddle
sam.biddle@theintercept.com
@sambiddle.99
on Signal
@sambiddle.bsky.social
on Bluesky
@samfbiddle
on X
Additional Credits:
Additional Reporting:
Nick Turse
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