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The Army is accelerating its push to operationalize artificial intelligence, moving beyond experimentation to deliver mission-ready capabilities at scale. The service's Project ARIA targets high-value use cases to reduce administrative friction and deploy AI tools directly to soldiers faster.
Enterprise Cloud Management Agency CTO Gabe Chiulli explained how the initiative is reshaping the service's approach to AI adoption, shifting from broad ambition to targeted, soldier-level impact. The project, launched in March, brings together global industry and academic experts to provide an outside perspective on the Army's most persistent operational challenges.
The effort examines everything from logistics to policy and day-to-day workflows to identify where AI can drive the greatest impact. Scaling AI across a force of nearly 2 million personnel requires more than technology. It demands new processes, faster acquisition pathways and a reassessment of risk. Chiulli said ARIA is intentionally designed to move at commercial speed, helping the Army rapidly translate innovation into operational advantage.
By GovCIO Media & Research5
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The Army is accelerating its push to operationalize artificial intelligence, moving beyond experimentation to deliver mission-ready capabilities at scale. The service's Project ARIA targets high-value use cases to reduce administrative friction and deploy AI tools directly to soldiers faster.
Enterprise Cloud Management Agency CTO Gabe Chiulli explained how the initiative is reshaping the service's approach to AI adoption, shifting from broad ambition to targeted, soldier-level impact. The project, launched in March, brings together global industry and academic experts to provide an outside perspective on the Army's most persistent operational challenges.
The effort examines everything from logistics to policy and day-to-day workflows to identify where AI can drive the greatest impact. Scaling AI across a force of nearly 2 million personnel requires more than technology. It demands new processes, faster acquisition pathways and a reassessment of risk. Chiulli said ARIA is intentionally designed to move at commercial speed, helping the Army rapidly translate innovation into operational advantage.

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