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In his 2025 book, AI, Automation, and War, Anthony King implores the reader to understand artificial intelligence as a phenomenon most closely related to organizational structure: “It is vital that we recognise and try to understand this military-tech complex, especially since…so much of the literature has fetishized AI as a technology, ignoring its organisational aspects.”

To understand how AI is being used in the war on Iran, we must understand where Anthropic’s Claude sits in the larger targeting system called Maven—and how the Pentagon’s quest for faster AI deployment threatens to overwhelm its planners’ ability to validate relevant data.

Maven, evolved

After the U.S. military captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, reports indicated that Pentagon leaders had planned the mission with AI tools made by Anthropic, including the Claude chatbot. Similar reports have emerged since the U.S. and Israel began striking Iran on Feb. 28; the Washington Post, for example, reported that “AI tools are helping gather intelligence, pick targets, plan bombing missions and assess battle damage at speeds not previously possible.”

Questions about AI deepened after a Tomahawk missile killed 175 people at a girl’s school in Minab, Iran. Week in Worcester quoted a DOD logistics programmer who said that the department had increased its use of “a Claude-based system over the past year, integrating it with many core operational decisions.”

But this is not quite the right way to understand Claude’s role at U.S. Central Command. 

The Anthropic chatbot is part of the larger Maven Smart System, which descends from the 2010s-era Project Maven. Google designed Maven to help analysts glean insights from oceans of video data. But the Silicon Valley titan withdrew in 2018, spurred by employees wary of helping the Pentagon. Work on Maven was taken over by Palantir, which in September 2024 announced a new contract from the DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory to improve its Maven Smart System. The contract, which is potentially worth nearly $100 million over five years, has evidently enabled Palantir to expand Maven’s functions.

Conceptualization of Palantir’s Maven Smart System by Jorge Morejon / Forecast International

Today’s Maven can be understood as a system of sub-components. Some are functional: command-and-control, target intelligence, battle damage assessment, and so forth. Others are bespoke AI models, designed, say, to detect objects in geospatial intelligence. Ultimately, Maven performs three core functions: it generates targets, matches munitions with targets, and assesses strike damage. 

To generate targets, for example, Maven cross-references a mix of open-source and closed-source information (think: DIA’s military databases) to identify potential targets, before and during a conflict. The closed-source data is likely the military’s classified data. The value of open-source data probably grows after the conflict begins; it might include social media with hints about enemy forces’ disposition and movement.

Claude appears to be an add-on to Maven, not a necessary component, for two reasons. First, the parts of Maven that do battle damage assessments and data fusion and so forth predate all LLMs, let alone Claude. And Palantir’s Artificial Intelligence Platform, or AIP, was making certain AI models accessible before Claude was even integrated with DOD classified networks. And second, Claude does not directly provide targeting recommendations, but rather—according to Joshi—helps synchronize other modules and AI models. It can be thought of as a sophisticated interface that simplifies the tasks of the human operator.

How the military plans

To understand how Maven is used in the military’s targeting process, we must understand the process itself. As described by The Economist’s Shashank Joshi, it runs like this:

  1. A commander requests options for targeting in specific scenarios.
  2. An intelligence directorate uses satellite imagery, signals intelligence, and other sources to build a database of thousands of possible targets—and “no strike” lists of buildings like schools.
  3. A “weaponeer” matches targets with available munitions.
  4. A lawyer informs the commander of the consequences of various strikes.
  5. The Strategy and Plans Directorate converts the database into a war plan.
  6. Operations uses the war plan’s guidance to produce air tasking orders for operational units.

Maven’s usefulness might be described as compressing at least some of these stages of target acquisition. DOD policy still requires that all targets be selected by humans, but CENTCOM’s Adm. Charles Cooper said that his planners have found that AI can help them do days or hours of work in seconds. This helps U.S. forces move more quickly than enemies can react. 

But the accidental strike on the girls’ school indicates that Maven enables the targeting process to move more swiftly than humans can validate the steps from target generation to selection. The Pentagon’s preliminary investigation found that the school building used to be part of an adjacent Iranian military base, but was “fenced off” sometime between 2013 and 2016, according to a New York Times report. The Defense Intelligence Agency apparently missed that change, and the school was consequently designated a target.

The apparent failure of CENTCOM to validate the data provided to it by DIA means that the speed of target acquisition overwhelmed the ability to verify targets with the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency’s data. (This trend is even more prominent in the Israel Defense Forces.) And it also suggests that Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei’s emphasis on reliability in decisions to use lethal force is not a sufficient framing to understand DOD’s disposition.)

This problem is not new, as Kevin Baker details in The Guardian. Efforts to generate targets faster than one’s adversary can respond date, at least, to the Vietnam War and the Cold War’s nuclear-deterrence doctrines. The use of defense technologies like Maven today should be understood as a prioritization of tactics over strategy – “operational excellence,” as Joshi notes, but without a “causal mechanism” that links targets with overarching war aims. 

Maven is soon to become a DOD program of record. By April 8, it is to be transferred from the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency to the Chief Digital Artificial Intelligence Office, per a March 9 letter from Deputy Secretary of Defense Steve Feinberg. The move is intended to allow the Pentagon to fund and further entrench the system over longer stretches of time.

Defense suppliers should note DOD’s new demand for technologies that can serve systems like Maven; it shows that at least some portions of the AI Acceleration Strategy are being executed in earnest. How the Pentagon reacts to this new wrinkle in the decades-old problem of technology outracing human checks remains to be seen.



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6 Comments

  1. Robert Williams on

    Interesting update on What the Claude AI chatbot really does for CENTCOM. Looking forward to seeing how this develops.

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