News: 0178093515

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Silicon Valley Execs Join the Army As Officers (gizmodo.com)

(Thursday June 19, 2025 @03:00AM (BeauHD) from the fully-on-board dept.)


The U.S. Army Reserve has [1]directly commissioned four top Silicon Valley executives as lieutenant colonels under a new initiative, Detachment 201, aimed at accelerating tech integration into military operations. While these part-time roles are intended to bring private-sector innovation to defense modernization, the move is pretty unusual. Gizmodo reports:

> The Army said in a [2]press release that the four executives are Shyam Sankar, CTO at Palantir; Andrew Bosworth, CTO at Meta; Kevin Weil, Chief Product Officer of OpenAI; and Bob McGrew, an advisor at Thinking Machines Lab and former Chief Research Officer for OpenAI. The four men are being commissioned at the high rank of lieutenant colonel as part of a program called Detachment 201: The Army's Executive Innovation Corps. As Task & Purpose notes, the men will get to skip the usual process of taking a Direct Commissioning Course at Fort Benning, Georgia, and they won't need to complete the Army Fitness Test.

>

> The Army didn't respond to questions emailed Tuesday but said in a statement published on its website that, "Their swearing-in is just the start of a bigger mission to inspire more tech pros to serve without leaving their careers, showing the next generation how to make a difference in uniform." Their role in the Army Reserve is to "work on targeted projects to help guide rapid and scalable tech solutions to complex problems," as the Army puts it. The new reservists will serve for about 120 hours a year, according to the [3]Wall Street Journal , and will have a lot of flexibility to work remotely. They'll work on helping the Army acquire more commercial tech, though it's not clear how conflict-of-interest issues will be enforced, given the fact that the people all work for companies that would conceivably be selling their wares to the military. In theory, they won't be sharing information with their companies or "participating in projects that could provide them or their companies with financial gain," according to the Journal.

>

> Silicon Valley has always benefited greatly from ties to the U.S. military. Silicon Valley companies were bringing in $5 billion annually from defense contracts during the Reagan administration, something that the average person may not remember about the 1980s. But it's always been an uneasy alliance for consumer-facing tech companies, especially over recent decades. That's all changing, according to many folks who align more with President Donald Trump, who was once considered a shameful person to represent in polite company. As Andrew Bosworth, the CTO at Meta, who is joining the Army Reserves, told the Wall Street Journal, "There's a lot of patriotism that has been under the covers that I think is coming to light in the Valley."



[1] https://gizmodo.com/silicon-valley-execs-join-the-army-as-officers-but-wont-have-to-attend-boot-camp-2000617223

[2] https://www.army.mil/article/286317/army_launches_detachment_201_executive_innovation_corps_to_drive_tech_transformation

[3] https://www.wsj.com/tech/army-reserve-tech-executives-meta-palantir-796f5360



Repost. (Score:5, Funny)

by TheMiddleRoad ( 1153113 )

Also, send them to the front lines like in Edge of Tomorrow..

Re: (Score:2)

by outsider007 ( 115534 )

Can't. Bone spurs all around.

Re: Repost. (Score:2)

by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 )

From the sound of things, they're not even trained for combat. Even if they were, they're not branched for it. While it's plausible they'd be deployed along with their unit, that doesn't mean they'd be placed anywhere near a combat zone.

The main advantage for the Army here is they've got whatever expertise they apparently need from them on retainer. Also, I wouldn't think too much of them starting as O-5 given this is the reserves we're talking about, where it's common to see inflated ranks.

Re: (Score:2)

by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 )

> From the sound of things, they're not even trained for combat.

They are not [1]line officers [wikipedia.org], so they would not command combat units.

I met a medical officer who'd been directly commissioned as a full-bird O-6. He'd run a civilian hospital, but had no military experience.

These tech guys are being commissioned as O-5's so that everyone knows how much authority they have just by looking at their collars. It keeps things simple.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line_officer

Re: (Score:2)

by Compaq Disk Rereader ( 10425332 )

Let's just send them into combat anyhow and UCMJ anyone who refuses.

Re: Repost. (Score:2)

by simlox ( 6576120 )

Get blood transfusion...

All hail our new technocratic oligarchy (Score:2)

by Mirnotoriety ( 10462951 )

The union of government, corporate, and military power is a seamless apparatus of control — where Zuckatollah wears a suit, commands an army, and owns the means of persuasion — ensuring obedience. Through convenience, surveillance, and the quiet erasure of dissent.

Give me a break (Score:2)

by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 )

> In theory, they won't be sharing information with their companies or "participating in projects that could provide them or their companies with financial gain," according to the Journal.

"In theory". I mean, give me a freakin' break. Everything these tech bros do has heavily favored profits over ethics... what sort of idiot doesn't see exactly what will be coming here?

Good idea (Score:2)

by mosb1000 ( 710161 )

This is actually a really good idea and I can’t believe nobody thought of it before.

Re: (Score:2)

by Compaq Disk Rereader ( 10425332 )

woosh!

Gimmick (Score:2)

by IDemand2HaveSumBooze ( 9493913 )

That's just a PR stunt clearly. As tempting as it would be to imagine these men being made to clean latrines with toothbrushes or moving their middle aged overweight posteriors through a military obstacle course, the ranks are obviously purely symbolic. They're not going to give up any of their work or golf time to this supposed military role.

As to what the purpose of this PR stunt is, I'm not completely sure. The stated goal is

> a bigger mission to inspire more tech pros to serve without leaving their careers

If the Army is hoping this will inspire tech graduates to enlist, they may mis

I can see that (Score:2)

by nospam007 ( 722110 ) *

Silicon Valley officers, fresh from their LinkedIn bios and skipping boot camp, take command of a recon drone unit.

Captain Elonson insists on managing the unit via Slack.

Troop alerts go unread because someone accidentally muted the “combat-updates” channel.

The platoon’s position is compromised when Lieutenant Zuckstein checks Facebook from the field, triggering geolocation metadata. Hamas thanks him in the comments.

Meanwhile, their cybersecurity officer deploys an AI that auto-optimizes co

Boling's postulate:
If you're feeling good, don't worry. You'll get over it.