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▲The Army’s Newest Recruits: Tech Execs From Meta, OpenAI and Morewsj.com
228 points by aspenmayer 2 days ago | 186 comments
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neonate 1 days ago [-]
https://archive.md/fDLHK
tomhow 1 days ago [-]
Comments merged from :

U.S. Army bringing in big tech executives as lieutenant colonels - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44273067 - June 2025

Related thread (not merged but down-weighted to avoid more overlapping discussion):

I'm the CTO of Palantir. Today I Join the Army - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44270660 - June 2025 (55 comments)

snerbles 1 days ago [-]
> [...] the four executives will all attend the Army’s six-week Direct Commissioning Course at Fort Benning, Georgia [...]

Sometimes known as "fork and knife school". I can't speak specifically for the Army, but a particular personal incident comes to mind.

When I attended AFROTC field training at Maxwell AFB, in a lot of ways it was a fairly typical boot camp experience, with roaming enlisted training instructors ready to very promptly and firmly correct any deviations from standard in a memorably expedient fashion (much less swearing than Full Metal Jacket, as it's the Air Force). One day during this fine summer camp I found myself on the receiving end of one such chewing out from a TI, for walking around the wrong side of a table in the dining facility.

It was in the midst of this comically scathing tirade (something about him threatening to crawl up my nose and living in my nightmares if I dared try it again) that this Technical Sergeant abruptly stopped, wheeled around and was about to tear into another hapless cadet that took the same detour I did. But instead, without a whit of the seething rage he was pouring out just a second before, he calmly patiently explained to this trainee that she was to take a different route, punctuating the instructions with a "right over there, ma'am". It was at that moment that I noticed that she did not have cadet insignia on her lapels, but captain's bars. It turns out she was a proper M.D., fresh from med school, directly commissioned and immediately outranking the sergeant that was giving me the what-for and her polite guidance.

So by Direct Commissioning, it is indeed direct.

duxup 1 days ago [-]
I remember my grandfather’s descriptions of WWII in the pacific. One was a Marine who made a number of landings and was involved in a lot that “I wish I could forget”.

The other was a Navy doctor. An officer, but really because he was a doctor.

Their experiences were wildly different. Not so much about risk but the Marine was a grunt and his description oozed what it meant to be at that level of rank. The doctor ... his description was that doctors, while they had rank, were largely left alone to their own devices to do what they needed to do. Rank wasn't really relevant to their daily lives.

snerbles 1 days ago [-]
> One was a Marine who made a number of landings and was involved in a lot that “I wish I could forget”.

My grandfather landed at Tarawa. He only talked about privately, it to family members that were in the service.

> The doctor ... his description was that doctors, while they had rank, were largely left alone to their own devices to do what they needed to do. Rank wasn't really relevant to their daily lives.

From my experience, military doctors tend to be doctors that happen to wear a uniform. They already have the skills actually needed by the service (unlike most military jobs, where it's assumed that you know little to nothing of the job), the direct commissioning training is mostly so they can function and fit in that environment.

Kon-Peki 1 days ago [-]
> military doctors tend to be doctors that happen to wear a uniform. They already have the skills actually needed by the service

Sure, most of them join either during med school or during residency, with Uncle Sam picking up the financial obligations.

Funny story - good friend was an army doc and we managed to both get time off at the same time/location. Hanging out along the ocean and come across a little kid that got hurt. So he goes into doctor mode and talks soothingly to the kid, who is very apprehensive. He says “I know you’re not so sure I’m a doctor. It’s because I haven’t asked your parents for their insurance info yet” and smiles at the mom and dad.

Later on he says that never dealing with insurance is one of the perks of being a doctor in the military.

jakebasile 1 days ago [-]
> Later on he says that never dealing with insurance is one of the perks of being a doctor in the military.

Despite not being anything close to an MD, a social media app I use has determined that I am. I get recruiting ads from the Navy that says this, in effect: "Don't worry about malpractice or insurance, just your patient". It's a pretty good sales pitch, I imagine.

neilv 1 days ago [-]
> "Don't worry about malpractice or insurance, just your patient". It's a pretty good sales pitch, I imagine.

If only the rest of government aspired to that. :)

CoastalCoder 17 hours ago [-]
In my corner of the DoD, we absolutely aspire to work like that.

It's beyond frustrating to have politicians use us as rhetorical punching bags. The stereotypes they espouse about civil servants are largely inaccurate. I say this from having worked decades inside the DoD an in non-defense private sector.

DiggyJohnson 11 hours ago [-]
Amen, similar experience here. There are parts of the US federal government that aspire to and excel in the way you have described.

Of course the opposite is true too. But it bothers me that much of the discourse on both sides tend to ignore the high functioning projects and sectors. It’s a cool professional experience to take part in.

neilv 10 hours ago [-]
Agreed. I was unclear, but I meant to refer to government policies around healthcare (especially insurance companies), not about civil servants.
hnlmorg 21 hours ago [-]
They kind of do, only their sales pitch is

> don’t worry about your constituents nor breaking the law, just your own self interest.

It really is about time politicians were locked up for their equivalent of malpractices.

DiggyJohnson 11 hours ago [-]
I think that would lead to even less civilized relationships between politicians and parties. Politicians throwing their rivals into courts and prison is not usually an aspect of a healthy civil society.
krapp 11 hours ago [-]
Politicians being above the law is not an aspect of a healthy civil society.

Throwing politicians into courts and prison after due legal process for crimes they actually commit is an aspect of a healthy civil society.

If your judicial system is so corrupt that every accusation against a politician is a ruse manufactured by their enemies and no fair trial is possible, then you don't have a healthy civil society either way.

theoreticalmal 18 hours ago [-]
And here I am thinking the threat of malpractice, and malpractice insurance costs, are part of the reason healthcare is so expensive in the USA
isleyaardvark 15 hours ago [-]
It's a small fraction: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3048809/#:~:text=Ov...

The bigger reason is profit-minded middlemen taking advantage of inelastic demand to jack up prices, a problem that does not exist in other countries.

bee_rider 14 hours ago [-]
It actually seems like an interesting bit of phrasing.

I think the ad, and you, are talking about malpractice insurance and other documentation to prove that you didn’t do malpractice.

The comment you replied to is actually taking about the underlying act of malpractice.

The first line of defenses against actual malpractice is that professionals are supposed to have some self-respect and standards. But of course our society is structured against professionalism. The insurance company or hospital admin doesn’t care if you are a real professional who does the right things when nobody is looking, that’s too hard quantify.

The ad is offering the opportunity to be a professional.

ryandrake 17 hours ago [-]
What happens in other countries when the doctor amputates the wrong leg or operates on the wrong patient? Does the government pay damages arising from malpractice?
halper 13 hours ago [-]
In short: in some, yes. In my country, one's private insurance company may pay damages for injuries caused by medical malpractice. This may be included in the home insurance or some health/injury/accident insurance. Otherwise and in addition, you are covered by the provider's malpractice insurance. Private medical providers must have malpractice insurance. There is also a national scheme, regulated by law, that covers all public providers, which in practice would be all the emergency departments etc.
lotsofpulp 16 hours ago [-]
They are. Those $10M+ lawsuit verdicts get paid one way or another, and everyone is doing unnecessary cover your ass work to be able to not be in the line of fire for that lawsuit.
more_corn 15 hours ago [-]
Have you considered med school? Maybe the advertising platform knows something about you that you’re not aware of yourself.
duxup 1 days ago [-]
Yeah the Marine talked openly about it maybe a handful of times with me, I got the feeling he left a lot out, even then they were never happy stories. I got the feeling he carried his experiences like a weight his entire life and he didn't ever describe it in any good terms, none of it. Didn't help that he lost his brother (also a Marine).
Aeolun 1 days ago [-]
I think it’d be fairly odd to describe any experience in which you have actual combat experience in a positive light.

At least, my experiences talking with a combat medic and the weather corps couldn’t be more different.

technothrasher 19 hours ago [-]
My great uncle was a Naval supply officer in WWII, and wrote a bunch of letters to my grandmother. He never left the ship during battles, so he couldn't have had as intense a combat experience as others. But he describes his time at the battle of Iwo Jima, killing Japanese soldiers who were swimming at the ship with explosives, and watching people die as Japanese fighters strafed the decks. What was interesting to me is that he doesn't particularly characterize it in a positive or negative light, but mostly just as completely surreal. He several times says he felt like he was in a movie. Unfortunately, he died before I was born and he never wrote anything after the war was over about his war experience. So I don't know how the reflection of time effected his thoughts on it.
sandspar 41 minutes ago [-]
I guess that rank is invisible to military doctors the same way that money is to rich people or positive attention is to good looking people.
jt2190 1 days ago [-]
My wife and I were at a formal event dinner banquet related to her med school. We were in a small group chatting: On one side an Air Force ROTC med student in his dress uniform and his wife. On the other side another med student and her Navy NCO husband in his dress uniform. I remember distinctly that the Navy NCO kept politely saying “sir” when he addressed the Air Force ROTC.

The Air Force officer mentioned that he got a “light” version of basic training. The Navy NCO said nothing. His ROTC’s wife added that it must have been petty light, because she remembered a call from him where he mentioned that they ran out of ice cream.

snerbles 23 hours ago [-]
Having been through both: AFROTC field training is about half the length of USAF enlisted basic. In fairness to the cadets, they attend training throughout their college years before and after Field Traning - the whole experience is more of a slow long ramp of goofy BS that tries one's patience in ways most enlisted troops won't quite comprehend until they're an experienced NCO. It's also much easier to "just be a number" and muddle through enlisted BMT. Try that in officer training, and you'll be ranked bottom of the class with limited career options.

In terms of physical exertion, enlisted BMT is a bit more intense. Job-specific training might be much more intense, for the handful of AFSCs that see ground combat.

breppp 1 days ago [-]
Reminds of the story of Major Major from Catch 22 who was promoted due to a computer bug to the rank of Major and outranked everyone in flight school
nimish 6 hours ago [-]
Iirc it was due to a literal computer finding it funny, back when computer was a job title and not a machine.
notpushkin 3 hours ago [-]
“Actually, Major Major had been promoted by an I.B.M. machine with a sense of humor almost as keen as his father’s.”

Apparently not!

seansmccullough 9 hours ago [-]
I also went to ROTC field training at Maxwell, and had a similar experience. Once on the way to the dinning hall with another cadet, we were saluted by two new medical officers who were very confused.
yardie 1 days ago [-]
I'm reminded of an ex who was inquiring about paying for dental school on a ROTC scholarship. She tells the recruiter that she was worried about all the yelling she'd have to deal with at bootcamp since she has severe anxiety. And the recruiter told her the medical officers don't do any of that, she had nothing to worry about.
franktankbank 1 days ago [-]
LOL.
bgwalter 1 days ago [-]
They are part time and this is just another revolving door between the military and industry. They are literally there to sell their products (and brag about "having served").

What are other nepotistic initiatives?

https://www.nationaldefensemagazine.org/articles/2024/10/10/...

"The Army in March 2021 awarded Microsoft a 10-year contract worth up to $21.9 billion for IVAS, but the initial version of the system experienced technical difficulties with a number of soldiers experiencing dizziness, headaches or nausea after wearing the goggles."

pjc50 15 hours ago [-]
Long ago the British Army used to sell commissions. A form of highly institutionalalized corruption. Mostly about social status.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purchase_of_commissions_in_t...

Maybe it's going to be a system for allowing tech companies to deploy their personal defense battalion against riots?

bee_rider 14 hours ago [-]
Notably, it was not formally possible to buy a commission in the British Navy. This is because the British Empire was an island and so their Navy actually mattered and couldn’t be lead by a bunch of idiots with vanity titles.
0xbadcafebee 11 hours ago [-]
Before the Royal Navy was professionalized, there were plenty of officers who were mostly useless. Rich people in high society used connections and favors to get the role, and this gave them higher standing in society. In fact, it was kind of the point: "gentlemen" were expected not to have a profession, as that would lower their social standing. They were just supposed to sit around being wealthy, and at some point lead troops into battle.

It was only at the end of the 17th century that Samuel Pepys introduced the officers apprenticeship, which of course, was mostly open to (again) high-born kids and people who got favors from the crown, but at least they had to have years of experience first and pass an exam. So the Royal Navy Officers were still literally nepo babies.

klelatti 10 hours ago [-]
> He was named "Horatio" after his godfather Horatio Walpole, 1st Earl of Orford (third creation), (1723–1809), the first cousin of his maternal great-grandmother Anne Turner (1691–1768). Horatio Walpole was a nephew of Robert Walpole, 1st Earl of Orford, (second creation) the de facto first prime minister of Great Britain. [1]

Horatio Nelson

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horatio_Nelson,_1st_Viscount_N...

fancyMorsel 1 days ago [-]
Yup, I’d expect a data scientist or equivalent programmer commissioning as a captain, not a c-suite executive that is more of an MBA graduate. It all seems fishy.
gexla 1 days ago [-]
I have never been an officer, but the C-suite in the military is like "flag rank" which is above Colonel (Brigadier General.) Colonels are more like high management. But they likely won't be promoted, won't have an actual command, and rank means little more than the title.
giraffe_lady 17 hours ago [-]
If private industry were the military, most companies would be headed by O5 or O6; the scope of duties and responsibilities of an eg VP or CFO are actually quite comparable to a lt colonel or navy commander, CEOs are fairly like captains & colonels. These ranks are enough to head a large ship, air base, or training facility with hundreds or thousands under their command. Only extremely large companies (50k+ employees) have anything with a role comparable to admirals or generals.
rpdillon 11 hours ago [-]
Former U.S. Navy Surface Warfare Officer. This checks out, based on my experience working as a civilian since 2004.
blantonl 15 hours ago [-]
CEOs are more like high ranking general officers, not O-6 level (Navy Captain, Army/Air force full bird colonel)

O-5 (Lt Col, Navy Commander) would be VP / GM level stuff, GS-13 through GS-14 in the federal government

O-6 equivalent in the civilian world equates to a GS-15 in the federal government, and a senior VP in the corporate world

O-7 (brigadier general) would be an EVP level position, C-level large org

O-8 (general) would be CEO

giraffe_lady 14 hours ago [-]
I think you’re just assuming the highest corporate role must be equivalent to general and working back from that.

For understanding their actual scope of responsibility I think my model is more useful.

rjsw 16 hours ago [-]
Making military doctors and dentists colonels is mostly about putting them on an equivalent place on the pay scale to where they would be in civilian life.
blantonl 15 hours ago [-]
The pay scale isn't really equivalent. For military doctors and dentists the typical lure is they will pay off all your student loans for a specific time commitment to the military.
sorcerer-mar 8 hours ago [-]
None of these people are MBA types. They’re also not “data scientists or equivalent,” but quite hands-dirty operators nonetheless.
VectorLock 23 hours ago [-]
>They are literally there to sell their products (and brag about "having served").

Gets you free priority boarding on all flights you take.

dmd 17 hours ago [-]
Some airline someday is going to figure out that if you guarantee overhead luggage space, people will pay more to get on the plane last instead of first.
majormajor 12 hours ago [-]
I've long thought this for economy tickets.

But if you really want to pay more, and are flying on higher fares, getting on the plane first turns back into a perk cause you get some free booze. And your seat is now more comfortable than the airport seats (even many airport lounge seats, where the best seats can go quickly when it's busy).

dehrmann 10 hours ago [-]
First class effectively has guaranteed overhead space, and you still see them boarding first so they can get champagne.
alexgartrell 22 hours ago [-]
Not sure it’s relevant in the cloths these guys take
pimlottc 1 days ago [-]
Don’t forget there was already a team of industry-sourced (non-commissioned) tech experts in the Pentagon, the Defense Digital Service, that operated for almost a decade before being sidelined by DOGE:

https://www.politico.com/news/2025/04/15/pentagons-digital-r...

navbaker 21 hours ago [-]
The key difference is the DDS folks were not uniformed military. That can make all the difference when trying to sell your product or service to a military decision maker.
ganoushoreilly 16 hours ago [-]
It's not even that. The biggest difference is by being sworn in, they now have Legal authorities and rights awarded to military personnel, but are also subject to the UCMJ. Depending on how they structure the program they may be able to get Title 10 and 50 coverage and possibly others. This drastically changes what they legally can or can't do on behalf of the USG. There's more to this than people realize. It's also not all that new. In the past they had "Consultants" deeply integrated into agencies to solve the same issues.

Palantir, Crowdstrike, many others pretty much started inside the govt and were built around classified information as a means to get their advantage. It's not right, but It's definitely something that happens. Source: I was there for it with both orgs and even back then everyone though Dmitry formely from CS was a dick. I still have the mousepad that Palantir created for the office in lieu of a training guide (just a bunch of printed shortcuts / commands).

moandcompany 14 hours ago [-]
Adding some additional context on most of the above:

Yes, as commissioned US military officers they become subject to UCMJ.

USDS and DDS employees are/were civilian federal employees with capacity for legal authority to act on behalf of the US Government.

DoD and its branches have uniformed service members subject to UCMJ, but they also have many civilian employees with decision making authority and ultimately the services report to civilian secretaries; the ratio of uniformed service members (e.g. enlisted, and commissioned officers) to civilians can vary greatly by service. Another main difference to consider beyond UCMJ would be eligibility to be considered a combatant versus not; not all uniformed personnel should be considered combatants. "Authority" is not exclusive to uniformed personnel.

Many DoD programs can be led or managed by civilians, typically a GS-15 which is roughly equivalent to O-6 (e.g. Army/Air Force/Space Force Colonel, Navy Captain)

If I recall correctly, Palantir's main starting point beyond some of its fraud-tracking origins at Paypal were through its attempts to compete in the DCGS-A / replacement acquisition in DoD.

Crowdstrike had Dmitry, but its main US Government ties were through Shawn Henry, a former director of investigative operations at the FBI; Crowdstrike had a few business lines in its early days, which included its intel/research/analysis services, breach investigation/remediation services, while it was developing its endpoint protection products/platform.

---

And to the upstream parent comment:

> The key difference is the DDS folks were not uniformed military. That can make all the difference when trying to sell your product or service to a military decision maker.

A lot of DoD acquisitions, developments, operations decisions end up being materially informed by civilian personnel that are direct employees of the US Government, contractors supporting the US Government via Federally Funded Research and Development Corporations (FFRDCS, labs, etc.), other contractors, etc. In some cases, it seems like the DoD programs are entirely reliant (i.e. dependent) on their contractor support (via FFRDCs, labs, etc).

Some of this comes from the fact that the typical active duty officer's assignment duration in a particular role (e.g. acquisition program manager, chief engineer, etc) ends up being two years or less before a permanent change of assignment (PCA). Having organic civilian staff in these roles can be essential for maintaining continuity and can be a key part of a program/mission's success.

(Also worth noting that in a lot of cases where the head of a program is a civilian employee, it's not uncommon to find that are military retired, prior service but separated, and/or also a reserve officer in the same or very adjacent field)

ab5tract 19 hours ago [-]
Really? I would assume that most ranked personnel would be less impressed by a person wearing a uniform that they never earned and don’t deserve.

But then again, pomp and circumstance…

navbaker 19 hours ago [-]
My take from my time on a major staff is it’s less about pomp and circumstance and more about being included in important discussions.
austin-cheney 1 days ago [-]
Direct commissioning is for bringing people in as lieutenants (O1). Think a 22 year old college graduate.

Lieutenant colonels are the equivalent of corporate senior directors (O5). This means they could be either a battalion commander, approximate footprint of 300-500 people, or a senior staff officer for a command/division. By that point they are expected to have at least 15 years military experience.

The challenge at that level of management is writing and evaluating plans for their organization that must be able to move across the battlefield and roll up all corresponding metrics. Think of that as moving your entire office staff to a new location 50 miles away as frequently as needed. A 6 week bootcamp won’t get you that. As someone with 28 years military experience and a corporate nerd with almost 20 years experience I promise that corporate management is not the same. That part time job can suddenly feel like a full time responsibility.

The exception to this are licensed doctors and lawyers. They enter the military as captains instead of lieutenants.

jltsiren 23 hours ago [-]
> The exception to this are licensed doctors and lawyers. They enter the military as captains instead of lieutenants.

And chaplains, I think. The three professions corresponding to higher faculties in a medieval university. Many weird things in the military make more sense when you recognize them as leftovers from ancient social structures.

austin-cheney 21 hours ago [-]
Chaplains are complicated. The Army has a dire shortage of chaplains so they may enter as first lieutenants (O2) as they attend their seminary education on condition they must attain a divinity masters and sponsorship from a religious organization. It used to be they would enter as captains just like doctors and lawyers.
runlaszlorun 16 hours ago [-]
Are they doing that now? I was looking at going through as an Army chaplain back in 2018 and I'm not sure if I'd heard about that. But I was just over the age cut off to go back in.
chipsa 1 days ago [-]
The point of commissioning them isn’t for them to take command of a line infantry battalion. It’s to have them have authority to do stuff that requires a Lt col, but is not actually commanding. It’s like how we commissioned a whole bunch of people in WWII to do admin jobs.
austin-cheney 1 days ago [-]
I get that. I am a signal officer. Those guys will be signal officers. I have a pretty solid idea of what their level of actual responsibility is. The point is they need some expertise to exercise that level of responsibility. Otherwise they are tiny advisors masquerading as people with real legal authority.
runlaszlorun 16 hours ago [-]
Signal Corps shout out. Been out a long while though.
1oooqooq 19 hours ago [-]
why are you trying so hard to not directly assume the latter?
lcnPylGDnU4H9OF 18 hours ago [-]
They don’t seem to be. I read their comments as directly calling out that they are “tiny advisors masquerading as people with real legal authority”, strictly because they do not have the requisite experience to be anything else.
giraffe_lady 17 hours ago [-]
Isn't there already a system in place for that sort of thing. I know a couple civilian experts who worked as consultants in iraq (think like water treatment plant engineers) who were given "effective" officer ranks to smooth out interactions with the military members they worked with directly, clarify who they could and couldn't tell what to do. But they didn't wear uniforms, weren't saluted, weren't considered members of the military for most purposes, are not counted as veterans, etc.

If it were simply that, this is a problem the military has run into before and has solutions to it. This is something else: at best weird propaganda at worst I don't really know.

ganoushoreilly 16 hours ago [-]
Not necessarily the same thing, in addition to their rank there are legal authorities conveyed as Officers. Title 10 & 50 for example.
blantonl 15 hours ago [-]
I've seen some specialist docs with extensive experience direct commission as an O5
nonameiguess 20 hours ago [-]
It's rare as hell, but you can commission directly at higher ranks if you have the required experience and credentials and there is sufficient need in the service. The CO of the dental unit at Fort Hood that did my gum grafts 14 years ago direct commissioned at O6.

As there isn't really any civilian equivalent to combat branches of service, however, they won't direct commission anyone into the infrantry at that level, sure, at least not since the civil war era.

djeastm 1 days ago [-]
As former enlisted myself, I don't understand why they need to be in the military to serve as advisors. No one's going to treat them like real LTCs anyway (outwardly they will, of course, but not with the same respect).
snerbles 1 days ago [-]
That also strikes me as odd. When I was deployed, we had plenty of contractors/DOD civilians to handle various technical things, and to help maintain continuity while the rest of us rotated in and out of the theater. They didn't need to be commissioned.

If these execs were experienced engineers that needed to be embedded in a unit in the field, maybe, and definitely not at O-5. Usually these sorts of urgently-needed experts become instructors and teach troops the specific technical skills without the need for being enlisted/commissioned/warrant themselves.

Someone more familiar with the political games inside the Pentagon will better understand this decision.

lazyasciiart 24 hours ago [-]
It’s probably a fun ego boost for the execs involved. And it makes them subject to following orders, to military jail for not obeying, etc, which is presumably a nice thing to have in your back pocket when managing egostistic jerks.
snerbles 23 hours ago [-]
A Lieutenant Colonel in an advisory role would have to engage in an astoundingly epic screwup to court-martialed under the UCMJ. They'll be counseled behind closed doors long before getting formally charged with Article 90 or 92.

An Article 88 (or 133!) case involving these guys would be a really funny scandal, though.

bee_rider 14 hours ago [-]
Is this just aristocrats buying commissions, but for tech nerds?
ericrosedev 1 days ago [-]
Contractors down range used to have something like a company logo or something as their rank, you could always tell because it would be some guy with a gut and long hair in fatigues with a weird rank. Give them that and let them feel like soldiers, not an oak leaf
UncleEntity 18 hours ago [-]
I was a contractor "down range" and the only dress code we had was no shorts, no open-toed shoes. The only time anyone would mess with us was at the chow hall if we didn't take off our hats or didn't have our helemts/flak jackets during alerts and then they just wouldn't let us inside unless we went to get them. Other than that they wouldn't bother us unless we were blatantly ignoring air raid sirens or smoking somewhere we shouldn't be.

When outside the wire we would, of course, follow the directions of the army escorts because they were unequivocally in charge. The only time I can remember anyone chastising us was because we were getting overly aggressive in traffic up in the Kurdish region and there was an incident the previous day where some mayor's son had his engine block shot out so they were like, "you guys need to cut that shit out, these are our allies up here".

tclancy 15 hours ago [-]
Because this is a different country now. I imagine someone who lived under a military dictatorship would not be shocked by this new approach.
paulddraper 11 hours ago [-]
Your comment doesn’t really make sense.

It’s too late to edit, but it could use significantly improve clarity/elaboration.

KaiserPro 23 hours ago [-]
In Boz I can't think of anyone less suited to the task.

At every stage of the RL expansion there has been a stunning lack of both solid direction and attention to detail. Not to mention piss poor logistics.

The default position for anything in meta/facebook is to just throw people at the problem. Which I suppose is a good match for a stereotypical view of the army.

1oooqooq 19 hours ago [-]
> The default position for anything in meta/facebook is to just throw people at the problem

sounds like a perfect match for the military

EPWN3D 1 days ago [-]
It's an ego trip. That's all.
scotty79 20 hours ago [-]
It's kind of weird how getting owned by the state might be ego boost for those people.
CoastalCoder 17 hours ago [-]
I'm guessing it's vaguely related to the "stolen valor" dynamic.
krapp 19 hours ago [-]
These are probably the kind of tacticool dork-ass losers who worship ancient Sparta and Rome. They want to be strong men created by hard times.

They won't actually suffer so much as a hangnail, of course, but inside their heads they're kicking Persians down the well all day every day.

VectorLock 1 days ago [-]
Get those sweet "Veteran" plates.
Bender 1 days ago [-]
Get those sweet "Veteran" plates.

In my state that only requires a DD-214 with honorable discharge and $50.

closewith 23 hours ago [-]
Possibly to subject them to military law and therefore exert significantly more control over their commissioned period.
ludicrousdispla 21 hours ago [-]
I wonder which vaccines they'll be required to take and whether they'll be subjected to drug testing :)
sieabahlpark 1 days ago [-]
[dead]
Jtsummers 1 days ago [-]
> The Detachment 201 program is aimed at bringing in part-time advisors from the private sector to help the service adopt and scale commercial technology like drones and robots into its formations.

So we're taking executives from companies that sell to the government and military to advise the military on what to adopt. And not only are we bringing them into the fold, we're commissioning so we can give them a pension in 20 years after they've recommended their own employers' services and products.

kotaKat 18 hours ago [-]
It's just building a club for rich folks to commission in as a field grade officer and give them a fancy dress uniform to wear to official government events where they get to direct contracts towards their parent companies.

That's all it is. Normally the officers come up through the ranks and build a grift to retire and peddle back to the military (see things like BeaverFit), but Detachment 201 lets them direct commission the grift back.

chipsa 1 days ago [-]
You think they’ll still be in for 20 years? And you need 20 “good years” to get a pension for non-active duty service.
oooyay 1 days ago [-]
The choice to pick up executives rather than engineers is a bit confusing if the goal is to modernize.
jfengel 1 days ago [-]
Executives are obviously more skilled. Just check out their paychecks. Each of them is worth at least a dozen engineers.
gibbitz 1 days ago [-]
By paycheck my company's CEO is worth 95 senior engineers and that's before stock options. With stock options he's worth 265 senior engineers! (Or 240 and 670 junior developers respectively)

He's so skilled he splits atoms with his mind. He probably should be president, except he's nowhere near the highest paid executive in the US. Probably not in the top 500.

knallfrosch 9 hours ago [-]
Through hyperbole, you imply that he's overpaid by market forces. If he manages 20.000 people and increases productivity by just 10%, he'd be worth 2.000 "normal guy" salaries. So a 100 factor doesn't seem far fetched to me.

What strategy would you suggest to arrive at a better price for his work?

jfengel 8 hours ago [-]
To calculate the market price you have to know about the competition. Is there someone else who could increase productivity by 9.99% but request only half the salary? That person could be better for the bottom line.
varenc 1 days ago [-]
Meta basically just paid $14B to acqui-hire an exec.
paulddraper 11 hours ago [-]
Maybe the lesson here is to be CEO.
1 days ago [-]
mter 15 hours ago [-]
Officers are management, a lt col is similar to a director at a tech company.

If they're trying to modernize the strategy and direction of the organization before bringing in additional SMEs, this makes a lot of sense. Good leadership and a good direction really does matter.

After the overall direction and vision is in place, then they can bring in technical SMEs who are hopefully also direct commissioned in and not just contractors hired for a year or 2.

whall6 1 days ago [-]
I think it would have been cool to see them allow a hand chosen direct report join them. And maybe that direct report’s hand chosen direct report too.
bilbo0s 1 days ago [-]
In fairness, the military is full of engineers.
cempaka 1 days ago [-]
It's about pushing an agenda and selecting the people with the correct (lack of) morality to do it.
kriro 1 days ago [-]
This strikes me as very odd. First of all, what's in it for the execs. Surely pay is worse so there must be some insider benefit. Or can they hold both positions? That just screams conflict of interest.

Secondly, why execs instead of people with actual technical skills. Surely military execs are already better prepared at managing military than some tech execs.

Lastly, as a non-U.S. citizen the optics seem horrible to me. Fire generals/people who served "the normal way" and bring in tech execs...that's gotta piss of just about anyone who ever served as a storyline or am I totally off base here?

lazyasciiart 24 hours ago [-]
Of course the optics are terrible but it doesn’t matter. Everyone is already either pissed off with trump or dedicated to never being pissed off at him.
CoastalCoder 17 hours ago [-]
I somewhat agree with your thesis.

But recent developments with Musk, the FY26 budget proposal, and CA National Guard make me think that the Republican party is starting to fracture more, and some of them must be taking a dimmer view of Trump in the process.

paulddraper 11 hours ago [-]
Sure, it’ll compete somewhere around 2028.
TeMPOraL 23 hours ago [-]
Maybe this gives US gov an extra leash on them? Surely the standards of what's approaching treason are different for people in service, so maybe it's just a way to trick execs into getting personally under government control, so they'll not be able to shield behind the whole "free enterprise" / "private business" thing when they want to trade with China or EU against the US Gov preferences?
aweiland 17 hours ago [-]
Maybe they get to pull a pension too? There's lots of examples of Admirals and Generals who "retire", get their pension payouts, but come back as an "advisor" effectively doubling their pay.
paulddraper 11 hours ago [-]
> Surely military execs are already better prepared at managing military than some tech execs.

That’s an assumption

AndrewKemendo 1 days ago [-]
Former Major, Iraq War Veteran and Air Force academy graduate here.

I can’t think of many worse ideas.

But here we are

cutler 18 hours ago [-]
It's a short walk from Facebook to Palantir, literally and metaphorically. Meta staffing for a long time has been packed with IDF operatives and AIPAC goons. All hail our not-so-new tech overlords next time you watch footage of a block in Gaza being "precison" targeted, taking out the whole extended family of an AI-generated target.
tempodox 24 hours ago [-]
> The recruits won’t work on projects involving their employers, George said, and will be firewalled from sharing information with their employers or participating in projects that could provide them or their companies with financial gain.

A laudable goal. Let's see how that works out.

jamesgill 10 hours ago [-]
This is common w/the Army and Navy, less so with other branches (and uncommon in the Marine Corps).

But it's most common for medical skills training, and very unusual to bring them in at this rank. Even MDs typically come in around O-3 (Captain/equivalent).

tdeck 24 hours ago [-]
To what extent will these folks be legally obliged to follow orders from the executive branch? Can they leave the military at any time?
neilv 1 days ago [-]
Is there modern precedent for this?

I thought the modern US military was very big on process and tradition in the development of officers.

spankibalt 1 days ago [-]
The Royal Aircraft Factory (Farnborough) during the notorious "White Feather" campaign hysteria of World War I; its workers were given a military rank, its superintendent, Mervyn O'Gorman, got field-promoted to lieutenant-colonel.

The somewhat famous quote "Alight here for the Home of Rest with Army Exemption thrown in", a familiar greeting to RAF's working force by Farnborough's tram conductors, is a testament to it.

jonas21 1 days ago [-]
Yes, see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_commission_officer

And for individuals with the right skills and experience, O-5 isn't unusual.

EDIT: Here's a random example:

https://www.reddit.com/r/Military_Medicine/comments/1468l1f/...

fiatpandas 1 days ago [-]
WW2, William Knudsen, president of General Motors, was directly commissioned in as a 3 star general. He was in charge of War Production. Sometimes, deep industry expertise can’t wait for OCS. Granted, this was wartime.
ls612 16 hours ago [-]
These guys are being commissioned into the Army Reserve the idea is that they can get basic military instruction now and when the shit hits the fan the Army can immediately call up their expertise and they will understand how things work.
mrbluecoat 1 days ago [-]
The reality is that other countries are preparing for Ender's Game style warfare with drones, robotics, and digital sabotage so the U.S. needs to keep pace. This announcement doesn't surprise me at all.
TheOtherHobbes 19 hours ago [-]
If I was in charge of preparing for drone war, tech company execs are the last people I'd hire. (With one or two exceptions.)
wbl 22 hours ago [-]
Look up everything from Assault Breaker we didn't develop because the funding ran out. Drones guiding artillery? Been there done that. Digital sabotage? Little thing called Stuxnet comes to mind.
mindslight 1 days ago [-]
Keeping pace by helping with other countries' sabotage efforts? If these actions actually ended up benefiting the country rather than being yet another nepotism based snipe hunt for woke, that would be a pleasant surprise.
esseph 16 hours ago [-]
I have read your 2nd sentence several times but don't understand it. Can you explain?
mindslight 13 hours ago [-]
Trump's usual approach is to remove or sideline career civil servants in favor of political apparatchiks whose only real goal is to demand obedience, under the banner of fighting the bogeyman of woke. I'm open to possibility that these appointments are different and might actually do some good, but I'm not holding my breath.
esseph 12 hours ago [-]
Thank you. It was the way you used "woke" there that threw me off, but I get it now.
timewizard 1 days ago [-]
> so the U.S. needs to keep pace.

Yea! We can't fall behind as the worlds leading weapons manufacturer. It's important that we tap even Silicon Valley to continue producing weapons of war and death.

> This announcement doesn't surprise me at all.

Our burgeoning legacy hasn't surprised me since the 90s.

wiseowise 24 hours ago [-]
> It's important that we tap even Silicon Valley to continue producing weapons of war and death.

What else do you propose? NATO, NATO aligned, Ukraine, Taiwan, and Axis of Evil take each other’s hands and start singing Kumbaya?

aquariusDue 23 hours ago [-]
Darnedest thing about group relations no matter the size just one bad apple is enough to ignite the powder keg even if most of the keg agrees to keep the peace, so the old adage remains true and will remain true probably: Si vis pacem, 9mm rimless.
wiseowise 23 hours ago [-]
> Si vis pacem, 9mm rimless.

Amen.

timewizard 22 hours ago [-]
You can't destroy liberty to create peace.
tehjoker 15 hours ago [-]
reality is closer to that than you imagine. its us continuing attempts at world domination that cause many fights
timewizard 22 hours ago [-]
So unless we recruit Silicon Valley CEOs into the military these nations will suddenly have to find peace through extraordinary means or face sudden death?

Are you familiar with brainwashing?

wiseowise 20 hours ago [-]
> So unless we recruit Silicon Valley CEOs into the military these nations will suddenly have to find peace through extraordinary means or face sudden death?

Your words, not mine.

absurdo 1 days ago [-]
Same. I encourage this, in fact.
ausbah 1 days ago [-]
not sure why ender’s game needs a reference when #1 & #3 have been around for 10-15+ years. i sort of remain doubtful that robotics will play as large of a role with how large much less of a role that infantry has played in modern warfare (think of exoskeletons, robotic carriers, terminator style killing machines)
esseph 16 hours ago [-]
What exactly do you call modern warfare, because I've been "involved in warfare" pretty recently, and without a lot of infantry nothing really happens.
iLoveOncall 22 hours ago [-]
Have you not followed the war in Ukraine at all? It's all about drones.
BrandoElFollito 11 hours ago [-]
I got detached, as a professional, to NATO. I got an officer grade despite never having been in the army.

The first thing I did when I met the real soldiers was to clarify that I got the grade for reasons, but that I absolutely am a civil and have no intent to be a bighead asshole who will boss them around just because that have less bars on the shoulders than I was given.

We started from a very, very good foot and had a wonderful collaboration.

Just do not pretend to be what you're not and things will be fine.

cies 11 hours ago [-]
You are all the same to me.
VectorLock 1 days ago [-]
Does this count as "Bought Valor?"

Kevin Weil, that tracks...

ImJamal 1 days ago [-]
Are they buying their position?
1 days ago [-]
superkuh 17 hours ago [-]
Yes.
20 hours ago [-]
sgnelson 1 days ago [-]
This is such a bad idea, I can't even...
snerbles 1 days ago [-]
O-5 isn't that much power - as a battalion commander, that's leading about 300-1,000 soldiers. They wouldn't necessarily be leading troops, but instead be in advisory roles where the rank might have them be taken a little more seriously by flag officers than if they were commissioned as a company grade officer.
the__alchemist 1 days ago [-]
Direction commission officers aren't line-officers (AFAIK), so they are don't command in the way you're describing. That assumes doctor/lawyer/nurse though...
ceejayoz 18 hours ago [-]
Is it about giving them power? Or making them subject to it?
susiecambria 1 days ago [-]
I don't know any tech execs and I am only remotely familiar with the military, but I am hazarding a guess that the cultures in tech and the military are not at all similar. I'm also guessing that there is a massive difference between fighting for Ukraine by using your tech skills and participating in a time-limited, no-real-skin-in-the-game learning exercise.

Not to mention that at the same time this is happening, SecDef fired a number of generals, and the military is being used for political purposes, at least according to some.

bilbo0s 1 days ago [-]
Everything you said is true. But regarding your last point, I mean, the military has always been used for political purposes.
overfeed 7 hours ago [-]
"Politics by other means" and all that, but the US military being overtly used for partisan politics was not the norm for the US.
cempaka 1 days ago [-]
Bad for whom?
thaumasiotes 1 days ago [-]
Why?
Animats 10 hours ago [-]
Are they being run through the Direct Commission Officer Course?[1] That's a six-week boot camp.

[1]https://www.army.mil/article/106407/direct_commission_course...

codedokode 6 hours ago [-]
Am I understanding correctly that this is to make them obey? If they are in the army they must follow the orders of higher-ups.

I wonder if they joined volunarily or not.

SideburnsOfDoom 22 hours ago [-]
Ah, "the merger of corporate and state power", what's the word for that again?
aspenmayer 2 days ago [-]
https://www.wsj.com/tech/army-reserve-tech-executives-meta-p...

https://archive.is/pGSZO

hunglee2 1 days ago [-]
Military-Civilian fusion, with US characteristics
el_jay 22 hours ago [-]
As overt corporatism goes, you can do a lot worse than simultaneously embed tech execs in the military command chain, and military commanders in the tech industry.
blotfaba 18 hours ago [-]
Lol this "AI alignment" rap is such a crock in light of all these things.
Simon_O_Rourke 22 hours ago [-]
Surely the incentives that makes a tech exec capable are wildly different from the sort of capabilities expected from any military innovation context?

Regardless of rank or an easy track to a commission, there's no "increasing shareholder value" incentive in the military?

zkmon 20 hours ago [-]
I also saw a lot of blockchain specialists joining the banks a few years back. Coincidence? Not quite. Defense is probably the largest consumer of technology and also driving force behind tech innovations (ARPANET?).
codingdave 2 days ago [-]
> The four new Army Reserve Lt. Cols. are Shyam Sankar, Chief Technology Officer for Palantir; Andrew Bosworth, Chief Technology Officer of Meta; Kevin Weil, Chief Product Officer of OpenAI; and Bob McGrew, advisor at Thinking Machines Lab and former Chief Research Officer for OpenAI.

I've always said that the FUD surrounding AGI destroying humanity is silly, as long as we aren't so stupid as to bring AI into military decisions. This group of leaders doesn't bode well from that perspective.

crvdgc 22 hours ago [-]
Imagine a former Huawei executive joins PLA, all hell would break loose. Somehow it's more moral or patriotic for these guys. Seems like the hawkish were right all along.
ericmay 21 hours ago [-]
> Imagine a former Huawei executive joins PLA, all hell would break loose.

What makes you think PLA soldiers and officers aren’t embedded in Chinese tech companies already? After all, their executive boards usually have CCP “representation”.

iamleppert 1 days ago [-]
Yeah because someone who spent their days building dashboards or working on the metaverse will have the first clue on how to deploy drones in the military. What a joke!
okdood64 1 days ago [-]
Their not asking them to be mission specialists. They're asking to guidance on how to build out and maintain a tech platform for the product (drone) folks to build on.
zelphirkalt 22 hours ago [-]
But they don't have experience to do that in the context of the military. All they have experience with is building leaking spyware platforms. Terribly unfit for the military.
detaro 17 hours ago [-]
So, valid targets for US enemies now?
mdaniel 2 days ago [-]
I would have thought for sure any such transformation would come from the NSA, since they strike me as a more tech-forward organization, or from In-Q-Tel (which I believe is mostly the CIA) that already has a strong relationship with the commercial tech space
tencentshill 2 days ago [-]
The key is those agencies are not under the total control of the commander in chief.
jsrozner 13 hours ago [-]
maybe the drones will play tiktok videos to the insurgents and thus render them dumb and thoughtless, or perhaps cause them to fight amongst themselves
TeMPOraL 23 hours ago [-]
People wonder why execs, not people with actual tech skills. I'll wager that for the military/government, this is not really about what skills those people bring in - it's about that accepting this role puts them under jurisdiction of military justice, and suddenly all kinds of things that are business-as-usual when e.g. dealing with foreign powers, could become potential UCMJ offenses.

Call me conspiracy theorist if you like, but this looks to me like US Gov seeking to put a leash on the tech/AI companies, by tricking execs into getting personally exposed for things that would otherwise qualify as private business. Strategically, that's worth way more than just getting some FAANG engineers as part-time advisors.

dugmartin 16 hours ago [-]
For engineers it would make sense to bring them in as warrant officers which is where you put technical experts that don’t lead.
esseph 15 hours ago [-]
"When their AI system went wrong and caused that massacre and required a sortie of F-35s to neutralize, we immediately took internal accountability and started processing them through the UCMJ. This kind of thing will never happen again, we are making sure of it."
lcnPylGDnU4H9OF 18 hours ago [-]
I had this same thought reading some other comments. It doesn’t seem much of a conspiratorial stretch.
fmajid 24 hours ago [-]
Reminds me of the scene in “Barton Fink” where the Hollywood producer is made a Lieutenant Colonel immediately after Pearl Harbor.
omnivore 1 days ago [-]
Civic tech is dead.
1 days ago [-]
tonyhart7 16 hours ago [-]
good, now the military planning to use technology more and more into war machine

hope franchise film that build dystopian future (ehm ehm ehm T1000 flashback) did not happen

thaumasiotes 1 days ago [-]
> The Army calls the program to recruit Silicon Valley executives Detachment 201: The Army’s Executive Innovation Corps. One of the executives, Andrew Bosworth of Meta (formerly Facebook) posted on X that the “201” monicker was a nod to an HTML coding command, in which a “201” response indicates the creation of a new programming resource.

Somehow I imagine that Andrew Bosworth didn't phrase things quite that way.

genter 1 days ago [-]
Maybe he did, he was an executive...
m3kw9 1 days ago [-]
PLTR stock up or what?
epicureanideal 1 days ago [-]
Anything to get more clueless corporate management losers out of industry.
bilbo0s 1 days ago [-]
Understand the sentiment..

but I mean..

why put them in the military?

That seems like, I don't know, maybe something that can go south in a lot of different ways.

ahartmetz 1 days ago [-]
Such ranks tend to be mostly for pay grade and they count for some formal but mostly meaningless stuff like who salutes whom first and who gets to tell off whom (in practice for such officers, it's more a shield than a weapon - everyone knows which kind of officers they are) in general situations. These officers aren't going to be leading direct fighting or anything like that.

Source: Was a draftee once, talked to a technical officer later.