The Spy Chief’s New Gospel: Buy, Don’t Build

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard is shaking the foundations of the U.S. intelligence community. In a bold and calculating move, she’s advocating for a departure from the traditional in-house development of technology, urging agencies to embrace private-sector solutions. Speaking at the Amazon Web Services Summit in Washington, D.C., Gabbard emphasized the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of leveraging existing commercial technologies over building bespoke government systems.

“I want to get us away from having the government trying to build tech solutions for itself,” Gabbard stated, highlighting the need for intelligence professionals to focus on tasks that require human judgment and expertise.

 

AI: The New Agent in Town

Artificial intelligence is at the heart of Gabbard’s vision. Under her leadership, AI has been instrumental in expediting the declassification of sensitive documents, including tens of thousands of pages related to the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy and Senator Robert F. Kennedy. This task, once a laborious manual process, has been significantly accelerated through AI-assisted scanning to identify sensitive content.