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Palantir's AI-fueled TITAN trucks are rolling into U.S. Army hands
Palantir's AI-fueled TITAN trucks are rolling into U.S. Army hands

Axios

time12-03-2025

  • Business
  • Axios

Palantir's AI-fueled TITAN trucks are rolling into U.S. Army hands

The U.S. Army now has in hand a few Tactical Intelligence Targeting Access Nodes, state-of-the-art trucks that promise to streamline the battlefield process of spotting, tracking and blasting. Why it matters: The program — years in the making, but also on time and budget — is critical to the Defense Department's connect-everything-everywhere dream of Combined Joint All-Domain Command and Control. It also supports two of the Army's biggest ambitions: deep sensing and long-range precision fires, or the ability to find, shoot and kill more accurately from farther away. Driving the news: Axios visited "Tower House" in Southern California to inspect a pair of TITANs that Palantir Technologies and its partners (including Anduril Industries, Northrop Grumman and L3Harris Technologies) are delivering. The package included one basic variant and one advanced variant. The former is built on a Joint Light Tactical Vehicle. The latter, on the Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles. TITAN consumes data from air, land and space and employs artificial intelligence to parse it, giving troops quicker, sharper insights. The latest: Palantir has now handed over three systems, with the first going to the 1st Multi-Domain Task Force at Joint Base Lewis-McChord last year. Another delivery is slated for early summer. The company declined to confirm the location or purpose, citing Army guidance. TITAN has so far avoided typical Pentagon pitfalls like laggard timelines and drip-feed budgeting, according to Akash Jain, Palantir's president of U.S. government business. He spoke with reporters at the California factory. "This is, really, a live system that is going to continue to get better, and that is different for the Army and for this type of technology," he said. "It is very much a software-centric acquisition, where hardware has been built around the software." "At the end of the day," he added, "Palantir does not bend metal." Zoom out: The defense and intelligence communities are betting big on AI. More than 685 AI projects were underway at the Pentagon as of early 2021, according to a watchdog. (The Army led the pack with 232.) Before that, in 2018, an official strategy warned the tech would "transform every industry" and influence all facets of national security. The havoc caused by DeepSeek's arrival underlines how seriously Washington takes its rivalry with China. Catch up quick: Palantir this time last year beat RTX for the $178 million TITAN production contract. The Army pick followed a yearslong design and prototyping face-off. Palantir's win was seen as a major shakeup. There were certainly doubters: Could a software specialist really pump out hardened battlefield vehicles? RTX is the third-largest contractor in the world when ranked by defense-related revenue, according to Defense News. "As we came together, there's been a bit of learning from each other," said Aaron Dann, Northrop's vice president for payload and ground systems. "We can pull from where we do welding of space tanks and take a look at welds on TITAN and say, 'Hey, are we doing this, right?'" What's next: TITAN production will continue in California for the foreseeable future. Its place at Arsenal-1, Anduril's planned Ohio megafactory, is unclear. Should the Army go full steam ahead, it is expected to buy 100-150 units.

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