Key facts
- The US Department of Defense is using generative AI tools to draft congressionally mandated reports for Congress.
- Pentagon CTO Emil Michael highlighted this AI usage, stating it reduces report drafting time from 200 hours to five hours.
- The GenAI.mil platform, launched in December 2025, provides access to AI tools like Google's Gemini for government use.
- Approximately 1.5 million Department of Defense personnel are now using generative AI tools.
- The Pentagon has signed agreements with eight major AI companies for deployment on classified networks.
The US Department of Defense is increasingly relying on generative artificial intelligence to streamline the process of producing congressionally mandated reports. Pentagon Chief Technology Officer Emil Michael described how AI tools, such as Google's Gemini for Government available through the GenAI.mil platform, can draft these reports in as little as five hours, a task that previously required up to 200 hours of human effort.
This initiative addresses the growing burden of reporting requirements, which have surged from over 500 in 2000 to more than 1,400 by 2020. The traditional process of identifying and compiling these reports could take three to six months. Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Jacob Glassman shared an anecdote where a team using GenAI.mil produced what they considered their best report in five years.
The Pentagon has expanded AI tool access, with 1.5 million personnel now using these technologies, up from 80,000 in December 2025. Furthermore, the Department of Defense has entered into new agreements with eight leading AI companies, including SpaceX, OpenAI, Microsoft, and Amazon Web Services, to deploy AI tools on classified networks for operational use.
However, the reliance on AI for critical reporting raises concerns about accuracy and oversight, as demonstrated by past instances of AI-generated errors in reports from organizations like KPMG. The accuracy of these AI-generated reports is crucial for congressional oversight and accountability regarding the use of taxpayer funds, especially as the Pentagon requests a $1.5 trillion budget for fiscal year 2027.
