Pentagon taps former DOGE official to lead its AI efforts


FILE PHOTO: The Pentagon logo is seen behind the podium in the briefing room at the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, U.S., January 8, 2020. REUTERS/Al Drago/File Photo

WASHINGTON, March 6 (Reuters) - The Pentagon ⁠on Friday named as Chief Data Officer a computer scientist who ⁠aided billionaire Elon Musk's efforts to overhaul the government last year ‌and who has boosted white supremacists and misogynists online.

In a social media post, the Pentagon said Gavin Kliger's new role "places him at the center of the Department’s most ambitious AI efforts," focusing ​on "day-to-day alignment and execution of the Department’s AI projects, ⁠working directly with America's frontier ⁠AI labs to support the warfighter."

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a ⁠Reuters ‌request for more comment. Kliger did not immediately return a message.

Kliger, in social media posts between October 2024 and January 2025, has voiced ⁠controversial views and reposted content from white supremacist Nick Fuentes ​and self-described misogynist ‌Andrew Tate.

The Pentagon's use of AI has taken center stage after a ⁠heated weeks-long dispute ​with Anthropic over guardrails on how the military can use its AI tools led to last week's decision by the Trump administration to shun the company and replace ⁠it with OpenAI.

On Thursday, thePentagon slapped a formal ​supply-chain risk designation on Anthropic - an extraordinary rebuke by the United States against an American tech company that was earlier than its rivals to work with the Pentagon.

Anthropic ⁠was the most aggressive of its rivals in courting U.S. national-security officials. But the company and the Pentagon have been at odds for months over how the military can use its technology on the battlefield. This conflict erupted into ​public view earlier this year.

Anthropic has refused to back ⁠down on bans for its Claude AI to power autonomous weapons and mass U.S. ​surveillance. The Pentagon has pushed back, saying it ‌should be able to use this technology ​as needed, so long as it complies with U.S. law.

(Reporting by Alexandra Alper and Raphael Satter; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Louise Heavens)

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