Here is his Od-ed piece if you want to read it.
The Pentagon needs a new AI strategy to catch up with China | Financial Times (ft.com)
and his Op-ed he posted on LinkedIN
Let's catch-up with China within 6 months (linkedin.com)
I don't want to spend my entire Thanksgiving holiday
responding to his Op-ed in the Financial times and his link to this post. But I do have to make several comments. Let's start with his academics. Chaillan, of
course, cites the problem with China as captured by Christian Brose in the book
"The Kill Chain" and implores everyone to read it. This book ignores centuries of warfighting
history and aside from the honor of Brose having worked for, and with, Senator
John McCain, falls well short of understanding how we fight wars. At the end of the book, Brose does capture the
political struggles inside the beltway accurately. It’s worth reading for that reason, but not
the warfighting parts. For the record, academically, the other book Chaillan
has read, "A Seat at the Table" falls well short of a solution for
the DoD. Software agility alone does not win wars even if you couple it with
the magic of AI. Acquisition agility,
alone, also does not close the OODA Loop.
If you study John Boyd, in depth, in particular he’s thoughts on both “Maneuver
Warfare” and “Destruction and Creation”, rather than his OODA Loop alone, you
get a sense of what innovation is really about, particularly when systems must
evolve. And when I say systems, I mean warfighting
hardware. This the hardware in the
physical realm that will kill people and break things. Not the software.
Also, his recipe for
winning can only be applied to the acquisition of things. And I’ll agree, acquisition is a fun place to
be, because what's not cool about building something shiny and new, winding it
up, and testing it? Unfortunately,
within our DoD, one could spend their entire career inside a single acquisition
channel and never see the system that one has labored on for decades ever be
adopted for use. This is frustrating for
those individuals on that evolutionary path, but evolutionarily speaking,
entire species spend their entire natural life on a path that ends. Dinosaurs, for which I am surely one, found
that out...until one realizes that every bird around us, came from a dinosaur. We need many things in development to be
agile. We don’t survive evolutionarily
because everyone moves to the mountain in the face of a flood. We move to the top of the mountain, we move
over the mountain, we move to a different shoreline. Natural selection doesn’t actually
choose. Those who survive are chosen by
default.
Organizing, training, and equipping the Department of
Defense, alone, does not win wars. In
fact, the entire DoD alone, does not win wars.
National Security is a whole government enterprise. All instruments of national power must be
aligned, along with the will of the people, and brought to bear against our
adversaries. That's not easy to do in
any government. It's very easy to do in
North Korea, where you can execute (murder) for example, the students and
teachers, who might bring in subversive material (Squid Game as an example), or
easier, within a government that can control much of the public dialogue in the
press, and mandate more exacting use of standards and protocols so systems can
integrate. Even then, if you don't think there is infighting within China (and Russia)
about the use of standards for military hardware and the optimization of
warfighting effectiveness, you haven't been reading about China (or Russia).
So…if I had the time, I would write an academic paper on
each of the things that Chaillan should be checked on…and asked to show us his homework. John Boyd would ask to see his homework. My fear is that when we ask, he will tell us
his dog ate it. But here we go…
1) Software is never done- how does this notion not cost
more over the lifetime of a system?
2) If you remove IP you remove profit incentives from a capitalist
enterprise. How do hardware companies
build hardware for profit that can be taken from them and given to their
competitors? Pretty sure Silicon Valley
runs on proprietary IP, the only thing many companies have.
3) DevOps is an unsecure thing. SecDevOps is putting lipstick on an unsecure thing,
what makes SecDevOps secure? And why can’t
we allow our Prime’s do it within their own secure ecosystems?
4) Decision making at the point of work? That works with widgets, not on the F-35. How does a software guy working on a fusion algorithm
for the F-35 make a decision about the entire aircraft, or more importantly,
how a pilot in combat will use that algorithm?
5) Not creating silos fundamentally misses how we fight
wars. Reading books like the "Kill
Chain" which doesn't define a single kill chain, will give you this
impression. Explain how netted warfare
increases combat power? This is a fallacy
for which many in the NCW business have fallen prey, not just Chaillan and
Brose.
6) How can we possibly accept increased risk of insider
threat? First, the insider threat eliminates
any chance of #3 above being real.
Second, one insider threat, like Snowden, is all it takes.
7) Just so I’m labeled as a total troll, although I’ll
accept the label, one view of the world I agree with Chaillan on is the necessity
for increased data sharing...not so much to share widely in both public and
private partnership unless under classified agreements/contracts. But we should find ways to return to the DoD Post
9//11 sharing of data with the IC prior to the Snowden situation (one single
insider) and lockdown. Again, see #3 and
#6 above.
I am not denying that China is a threat... I'm saying that we don't win by catching up
to China with AI in the next six months.
It is dangerous if we try. We
win, by continuing to push technology through capitalist principles and solving
problems like energy ubiquity. We need
more energy. Find more energy while continuing to defend
and secure our infrastructure while building warfighting hardware optimized for
fighting in an effective kill chain. Then
we organize around these kill chains, we already are. And train relentlessly to fight. We already do. To be clear, a kill chain is not a kill web. Brose is talking about a nonexistent kill web. To fight everywhere, is akin to defending
everywhere. Must I quote, Alexander the
Great? I will, “To defend everywhere is
to defend nowhere.” The same is true for
the offensive projection of force. That’s
an impossible pipe dream…we don’t achieve it with hardware or software. It’s unachievable.
In closing, I just have to point out that Chaillan also takes
a swipe at DARPA. That’s truly odd. Of course, DARPA is not above
criticism...however as an organization that defines most of the agility he
craves, an organization that has broken the stove pipes, an organization that
moves quickly, with the ability to fail often, and with decisions being made at
the edge, he totally doesn't understand that organization. That is a very strange snipe when there are so
many other things wrong with DoD Acquisition for him to focus his ire on.