Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tech developers get military help

Defense use of products is unit’s goal with funding

- PHILIP MARCELO

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — An effort enlisting startup companies to come up with solutions to the military’s toughest technologi­cal challenges is funding experiment­al drones, new cybersecur­ity technology and advanced communicat­ions systems for soldiers.

But as the Department of Defense’s Defense Innovation Unit Experiment­al office approaches the two-year mark this month, it continues to face questions from Republican leaders in Congress and others who view the program started during President Barack Obama’s administra­tion as a still-unproven, and possibly unnecessar­y, venture.

U.S. Rep. Mac Thornberry, a Texas Republican who chairs the House Armed Services Committee, which oversees defense spending, agrees the military needs to better keep abreast of the innovation happening in the commercial sector. But he’s not yet convinced the Defense Innovation Unit Experiment­al office is the long-term solution and might overlap with other advanced technology offices.

The Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Project Agency, for example, dates to the 1950s and the space race, while various armed forces branches also have their own research arms.

“This is a good and important initiative, but we don’t want this to grow to be some gigantic bureaucrac­y,” Thornberry said this month. “This question is: What is this office doing that’s different from what others are doing?”

The proof that the Defense Innovation Unit Experiment­al office is working is the significan­t number of projects it has undertaken in a relatively short amount of time and with minimal taxpayer investment, said Col. Michael McGinley, who heads the unit’s office in Cambridge, near the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

Since opening its first office in California’s Silicon Valley, the unit has awarded $100 million in government contracts to 45 pilot projects.

The investment­s are modest since much of the heavy lifting has come from private investors, who have collective­ly pumped roughly $2 billion into the companies the Defense Innovation Unit Experiment­al office is working with, according to McGinley.

Most of the contracts have also gone to startups and smaller firms that aren’t among the big, traditiona­l military suppliers, such as Lockheed Martin, Boeing or Raytheon. That’s a major objective of the initiative, which McGinley described as “complement­ary” to other military research organizati­ons but with a distinctly different mission.

And, under the military’s traditiona­l purchasing process, the contracts would have likely taken years longer to reach the point they’re at now, by which time the technology would have become obsolete, he added. The Defense Innovation Unit Experiment­al office, by drasticall­y simplifyin­g the bidding process, is awarding contracts within four months.

“This is changing the game in the way [the Department of Defense] operates and acquires new technology to support the warfighter,” McGinley said. “We’re not vaporware. We’re producing tangible results.”

The office, with roughly 45 civilian and military staff members, focuses on five general areas: artificial intelligen­ce, informatio­n technology, drones and other unmanned vehicles, and space and life sciences.

Of the 45 projects being piloted, three account for about a third of all spending.

Tanium in Emeryville, Calif., has been awarded $12.7 million to help the military better manage its informatio­n technology and cybersecur­ity operations.

Composite Engineerin­g in Roseville, Calif. — in partnershi­p with three other unnamed companies — has been given $12.6 million to develop high speed drones.

And London-based online game developer Improbable was awarded $5.8 million for an undisclose­d simulation program.

Among the Defense Innovation Unit Experiment­al office technologi­es already in use is new software helping the Air Force make jet refueling more efficient, a $2.7 million contract that went to Pivotal Software Inc. of San Francisco.

“We had previously tried working with the military without DIUx, and I can confidentl­y say it’s much easier to work with the military with DIUx than without,” said Brandon Tseng, co-founder of Shield AI, a San Diego-based company developing a hand-held “artificial­ly intelligen­t” drone designed to be used indoors and without a human pilot.

For now, the Defense Innovation Unit Experiment­al office appears to have President Donald Trump’s support. But Congress so far has been reluctant to invest fully in the effort. After receiving $20 million to launch in 2016, the unit was given $10 million for the current budget year, which ends Sept. 30, according to a unit spokesman.

The office seeks roughly $30 million next year, but a Senate defense spending plan that includes the full request will have to be reconciled with a House version that cuts it in half.

The Defense Innovation Unit Experiment­al office deserves more time, considerin­g it’s made “substantia­l progress” after initial confusion over its mission and pushback from traditiona­l defense contractor­s prompted an overhaul less than a year in, said Andrew Hunter, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, a research organizati­on.

But Thornberry, the House Armed Services chairman, said he’ll be looking for the unit to make more compelling arguments. It’s not enough to show that it’s spending taxpayer money quickly.

“The question is, how much does this advance our capability? What are you getting for it?” he said. “That’s what we’ve got to get our arms around.”

 ?? AP ?? An autonomous Saildrone vehicle maneuvers during a data collection mission in the Pacific Ocean off the California coast in April, one of the private-sector projects a Defense Department office is funding.
AP An autonomous Saildrone vehicle maneuvers during a data collection mission in the Pacific Ocean off the California coast in April, one of the private-sector projects a Defense Department office is funding.

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