

Anduril, Palantir and SpaceX are changing how America wages war
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories.THE IRAN war may end up teaching America many lessons. One that it has learned the hard way is the woeful economics of using traditional weaponry against cheap Iranian drones.
“The dynamics of the world have changed,” says Emil Michael, a former Silicon Valley executive who is now a senior official in the Pentagon. “You don’t want to spend a $1m missile to take out a $50,000 drone.”That is one reason why the Trump administration is turning to a new clique of defence upstarts that are reimagining how to wage war.
They are led by Palantir, a software giant providing intelligence systems; SpaceX, whose Starshield satellite network provides reconnaissance and connectivity; and Anduril, an up-and-coming favourite that makes air and sea drones alongside anti-drone weaponry. This trio of so-called “neo-primes” have close ties with gung-ho figures in the Trump administration.
And they are making the giants of the military-industrial complex increasingly nervous.America’s legacy “prime” contractors have, in the government’s telling, grown stodgy, overpriced and risk-averse as a result of their lucrative sinecures. “If the [newcomers] are good and they get their sea legs, they’re going to win some of that business that otherwise would have gone through a traditional prime,” Mr Michael says.This year the challengers have won some big endorsements.
In January Pete Hegseth, America’s secretary of war, used SpaceX’s base in Texas as the backdrop to release a new artificial-intelligence strategy, promising that the Department of War (DoW) would draw inspiration from Elon Musk’s management approach and “accelerate like hell”. In March it said Palantir’s AI-infused command-and-control system, called
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