ALL THINGS CYBER
ARC: AI-Assisted Curriculum Updates
Doctrine and best practices evolve rapidly, but updating military curricula is slow and resource intensive. AI-Assisted Revisions for Curricula (ARC) was developed to automatically flag outdated content in training materials. Although it was originally slated for two test sites, there was sufficient demand such that ARC is now in use at seven Army training centers, including the Fires Center of Excellence at Fort Sill, Oklahoma and the U.S. Army Medical Command. Instructors rate ARC’s productivity impact at 5.5 out of 6. It is a program that can change training curri- cula and requirements on demand, and those changes are then uploaded into PAL3 for delivery to students.
AWE: AI for Military Writing and Critical Tinking
Clear communication is as vital as firepower, but being able to clearly communicate is a learned skill. Te Army Writing
Enhancement (AWE) tool is an AI-powered assistant that guides Soldiers through argument construction and improves their writing. Unlike generative AI tools that do the writing for you, AWE coaches Soldiers before and after they write, enhancing both their thinking and communication skills. Te system was initially tested at Fort Leavenworth, and AWE is now set for a 1,000-Soldier study in the fall of 2025, with early users report- ing persistent improvements in writing clarity.
A DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD: AI-DRIVEN CYBERSECURITY Modern warfare is increasingly fought in the digital domain, where cyberattacks can cripple infrastructure, compromise sensi- tive information and disrupt military operations. AI is playing a dual role in this space—as both a powerful tool for cyber defense and a potential threat when weaponized by adversaries. Cyber- attacks today are evolving at machine speed. While traditional cybersecurity systems rely on human analysts to identify and
CRITICAL COMMUNICATIONS
U.S. Army Pfc. Luis Ramos, a signal operations support specialist assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion, III Armored Corps, verifies digital connectivity during the Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion Command Post Exercise II at Fort Cavazos, Texas, on February 24, 2025. In a battlefield environment, the signal element is crucial for higher echelons of command to communicate with their subordinate units. (Photo by Pfc. Ariana Smith, 7th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment)
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