AI’s New Frontier in War Planning
How AI Agents Can Revolutionize Military Decision-Making
By MAJ David S. Jerome
Article published on: March 27, 2025 in Field Artillery 2025 E-edition
Read Time: < 10 mins
Throughout history, rapid changes in the geopolitical and military environment impacted
decision-makers’ ability to accomplish strategic or operational objectives. Being too slow to adapt to changing
conditions can be catastrophic in a dynamic environment. History is rife with accounts of militaries paying
steep prices in lost lives, battles and even wars due to their failure to adapt.1 The United States’ national security depends on
planners’ ability to account for this dynamism and expeditiously identify gaps, exploit opportunities and keep
pace to stay competitive in modern warfare.
The Department of Defense (DOD) should aggressively begin experimenting with Agentic AI tools (a category of
artificial intelligence that can work through a series of tasks on its own to achieve an assigned, complex
objective2 in its Joint Operational
Planning Process (JOPP) for two important reasons. First, Agentic AI has the potential to synthesize a broad
scope of traditional and non-traditional planning factors more quickly and comprehensively than humans alone to
help produce more thorough, objective courses of action (COAs). Second, once a COA is selected, Agentic AI also
has the potential to help rapidly publish downstream directives and orders, flattening communication and saving
hundreds of man-hours in each planning cycle.
Agentic AI is a capability that could swiftly account for these changing battlespace conditions and help solve
large-scale, complex problems independently. This differs from current popular large language models dependent
on individual prompts to perform a simple, specific task. Creating multiple dilemmas for a near-peer adversary
requires continuous integration of capabilities across all instruments of power and all domains, including the
electromagnetic spectrum and the information environment.3 In the fourth industrial revolution, Agentic AI is a method of deploying
multiple autonomy-based technologies working synergistically that can perceive its environment and define a COA
on its own to achieve a given goal.4
Using this technology with human planners can produce an accelerated multi-disciplinary thinking machine.
Imagine a planning cell with a multifaceted “agent” who could understand geopolitical trends, global dynamics and
national policies as it pertains to a conflict. It could also account for the limitations and constraints of a
military in all operational domains through the survey of multiple data sets. This type of “think-spear,” which
could also minimize the influence of groupthink, favor-chasing and counterproductive biases, can generate new
opportunities and avenues of approach for decision makers. Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks confirmed
this notion during the unveiling of the Pentagon’s 2023 Data, Analytics and Artificial Intelligence Strategy,
stating that “from the standpoint of deterring and defending against aggression, AI-enabled systems can help
accelerate the speed of commanders’ decisions and improve their quality and accuracy.”5 We offer here that Agentic AI is the new frontier
‘AI enabler’ the DOD should accelerate the adoption of to achieve these aims.
Alternatively, envision the United States–slow to adapt and hamstrung by its traditional planning
processes–competing with an adversary equipped with this “think-spear” across the strategic, operational and
tactical levels. No amount of high technology in the hands of our warfighters can out-fight an adversary who
out-maneuvers us when they have better, more rapid information flow. The implications of contesting an adversary
with this type of intelligence and decision space warrant strong consideration for Agentic AI in a parallel
planning construct.
The Russia-Ukraine war has offered a glimpse of the value of AI in modern warfare and its impact on military
operations and tactics. Earlier this year, Time reported that Palantir Technologies AI software was responsible
for most of the targeting in Ukraine.6 Additionally, Palantir has imbedded a software engineer with each
battalion, demonstrating the kind of experimentation that has accelerated the “most significant fundamental
change in the character of war ever recorded in history,” according to General Mark Milley, former Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff.7 Indeed,
Defense One reported that the Pentagon has also been integrating “AI and machine learning into its intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance operations, helping the Ukrainian military thwart some Russian attacks.8 These nascent experimentations in
AI on the battlefield foretell the urgent need for our nation’s military to get ahead on decision-making
processes, too.
Agentic AI in the Joint Operations Planning Process can provide information superiority at the speed of
relevance. Following, we submit a few ways in which Agentic AI could serve as an effective mean to achieve ends:
- Agentic AI, with superior multi-domain awareness, could make force posture recommendations to planners and
create multiple dilemmas in a Multi-Domain Operations (MDO) construct due to its ability to consistently
curate information on movements of joint and coalition units as well as the adversary.
- Agentic AI can help distinguish priorities on the Joint Integrated Prioritized Target List (JIPTL)based on
real-time conditions in the battlespace, including the adversary’s capabilities, avenues of approach, risks
and opportunities.
- Agentic AI can track and determine potential logistical shortfalls (e.g. fuel, supply, munitions)before they
occur to ensure copacetic sustainment support to discrete forces across a vast theater.
- Agentic AI can keep “know thy enemy” at the center of COA development. Red teaming is an element planners
can quickly lose sight of as the stress of conflict naturally induces one to return to a comfortable known,
our own way of fighting, without the enemy’s vote.
- Agentic AI can instantly synchronize guidance and intent across the battlespace. Reducing the potential for
fratricide and increasing tactical-level flexibility and lethality.
- Finally, most fundamentally, planners can leverage AI to produce and disseminate all downstream orders that
are born from the cyclical planning process, saving hundreds of man-hours every cycle on tedious, repetitive
administrative inputs and permitting more warfighters to be redirected to the fight.
We acknowledge there is still much to learn about the risks of Agentic AI and its resilience in a contested
communications environment. Theoretical discussions on ethics, security and best practices should continue.
Nonetheless, there are countries like China who are competitive in the AI race with a clear desire to achieve
technological superiority. Future warfare will almost certainly be won first in the information domain.
Military leaders should accelerate experimentation and adoption of Agentic AI tools into joint operational
planning processes. It is critical they should do so with an iterative mindset, working to mitigate risks as
they arise (machine learning will be helpful in this regard), rather than waiting for a perfect product to
implement. When on the precipice of a technological revolution, we must embrace the risk that comes with taking
a giant leap. For it is, no doubt, a greater risk to national security to not be the first Great Power to
harness this great power.
Opinions, conclusions, and recommendations expressed or implied within are solely those of the authors and do
not necessarily represent the views of the United States Army, the United States Air Force, the Department
of Defense or any other US government agency.
Notes
1. Mallick, Pankaj. 2024. Artificial Intelligence,
Ethics, and the Future of Warfare: Artificial Intelligence, National Security, and the Future of
Warfare. 1st ed. London: Routledge India.2. Griffith, Erin. “A.I. Isn’t Magic, but Can It Be Agentic?” The New York
Times, September 6, 20 24. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/06/business/artificial-intelligence-agentic.html
3. “Multi-Domain Operations in NATO - Explained: NATO’s
Strategic Warfare Development Command.” Allied Command Transformation. October 5, 2023. https://doi.org/Retrieved from https://www.act.nato.int/article/mdo-in-nato-explained/
4. Mallick, Pankaj. 2024. Artificial Intelligence, Ethics,
and the Future of Warfare: Artificial Intelligence, National Security, and the Future of Warfare. 1st ed.
London: Routledge India.
5. DOD Releases AI Adoption Strategy. ” U.S. Department of
Defense. November 2, 2023. https://doi.org/ Retrieved
from
https://www.defense.gov/News/News-Stories/Article/Article/3578219/#:~:text=The%20Pentagon’s%202023%20Data,%
20Analytics% 20and%20Artificial%20Intelligence%20Adoption%20Strategy
6. Bergengruen, Vera. “How Tech Giants Turned Ukraine Into
and AI War Lab.” TIME Magazine, February 8, 2024.
https://www.time.com/6691662/ai-ukraine-war-palantir/
7. Ibid.
8. Tucker, Patrick. “AI Is Already Learning from Russia’s
War in Ukraine, DOD Says. ” Defense One, April 21, 2022. https://www.defenseone.com/technology/2022/04/ai-already-learningrussias-war-ukraine-DOD-says/365978/
Author
LTC Rich Farnell is a National Security Fellow at Harvard Kennedy School, who is researching Agentic AI
Strategic Parallel Planning, he was also the commander of the 2nd Battalion, 18th Field Artillery
Regiment, Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Previously, he served as a special assistant to the Vice Chief of Staff
of the Army, the Pentagon. He also served as a brigade FSO, battalion S3, brigade XO, and MDTF(P) XO. He
received multiple battery commands and served as an observer coach/trainer at the National Training
Center, Fort Irwin, California. He is a graduate of MIT Seminar XXI, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, and has experience in data analytics.
Lt Col Kira Coffey is an Air Force National Defense Fellow and an International Security Program research
fellow at Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center. Her research focuses on whole-of-nation coordination
to effectively compete in Great Power Competition. Kira is a combat mobility pilot with over 2,700 hours
in the C-130J and KC-10. She was a DOD Olmsted Scholar in Guangzhou, China and subsequently served as
the Aide-de-Camp to the Commander, US Indo-Pacific Command, directly supporting and advising him on
regional security matters. Most recently, Kira commanded Pacific Air Force’s sole tactical airlift
squadron where she was responsible for the readiness and employment of 160 aircrew and over $1 billion
in aircraft assets.