Chattanooga Times Free Press

Amazon, Microsoft wage war over the Pentagon’s ‘war cloud’

- BY MATT O’BRIEN

Amazon and Microsoft are battling it out over a $10 billion opportunit­y to build the U.S. military’s first “war cloud” computing system. But Amazon’s early hopes of a shock-and-awe victory may be slipping away.

Formally called the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastruc­ture plan, or JEDI, the military’s computing project would store and process vast amounts of classified data, allowing the Pentagon to use artificial intelligen­ce to speed up its war planning and fighting capabiliti­es. The Defense Department hopes to award the winner-take-all contract as soon as August. Oracle and IBM were eliminated at an earlier round of the contract competitio­n.

But that’s only if the project isn’t derailed first. It faces a legal challenge by Oracle and growing congressio­nal concerns about alleged Pentagon favoritism toward Amazon. Military officials hope to get started soon on what will be a decade-long business partnershi­p they describe as vital to national security.

“This is not your grandfathe­r’s internet,” said Daniel Goure, vice president of the Lexington Institute, a defense-oriented think tank. “You’re talking about a cloud where you can go from the Pentagon literally to the soldier on the battlefiel­d carrying classified informatio­n.”

Amazon was considered an early favorite when the Pentagon began detailing its cloud needs in 2017, but its candidacy has been marred by an Oracle allegation that Amazon executives and the Pentagon have been overly cozy. Oracle has a final chance to make its case against Amazon — and the integrity of the government’s bidding process — in a court hearing Wednesday.

“This is really the cloud sweepstake­s, which is why there are such fierce lawsuits,” said Wedbush Securities analyst Daniel Ives.

Ives said an opportunit­y that was a “no brainer” for Amazon a year ago now seems just as likely to go to Microsoft, which has spent the past year burnishing its credential­s to meet the government’s security requiremen­ts.

For years, Amazon Web Services has been the industry leader in moving businesses and other institutio­ns onto its cloud — a term used to describe banks of servers in remote data centers that can be accessed from almost anywhere. But Microsoft’s Azure cloud platform has been steadily catching up, as have other providers such as Google, in both corporate and government settings.

With an acronym evoking Star Wars and a price tag of up to $10 billion over the next decade, JEDI has attracted more attention than most cloud deals. A cloud strategy document unveiled by the Defense Department last year calls for replacing the military’s “disjointed and stove-piped informatio­n systems” with a commercial cloud service “that will empower the warfighter with data and is critical to maintainin­g our military’s technologi­cal advantage.”

In a court filing last month, Lt. Gen. Bradford Shwedo said further delays in the Oracle case will “hamper our critical efforts in AI” as the U.S. tries to maintain its advantage over adversarie­s who are “weaponizin­g their use of data.” Shwedo said JEDI’s computing capabiliti­es could help the U.S. analyze data collected from surveillan­ce aircraft, predict when equipment needs maintenanc­e and speed up communicat­ions if fiber and satellite connection­s go down.

Amazon was considered an early front-runner for the project in part because of its existing high-security cloud contract with the Central Intelligen­ce Agency. It beat out IBM for that deal in 2013.

Worried that the Pentagon’s bid seemed tailor-made for Amazon, rivals Oracle and IBM lodged formal protests last year arguing against the decision to award it to a single vendor.

In an October blog post, IBM executive Sam Gordy wrote that a single-cloud approach went against industry trends and “would give bad actors just one target to focus on should they want to undermine the military’s IT backbone.”

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