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https://dair.nps.edu/handle/123456789/5506| Title: | The Pentagon’s Revolution in Software-Defined Warfare and Its Testing Dilemma |
| Authors: | Nickolas H. Guertin, Douglas C. Schmidt John Robert |
| Keywords: | software defined warfare AI-driven decision support digital twins and simulation rapid adaptability autonomous systems cyber operations |
| Issue Date: | 30-Apr-2026 |
| Publisher: | Acquisition Research Program |
| Citation: | APA 7 |
| Series/Report no.: | Acquisition Management;SYM-AM-26-069 Acquisition Management;SYM-AM-26-191 |
| Abstract: | Warfare is inherently messy and adaptive—Sun Tzu’s observation that “all warfare is based on deception” remains relevant—but today’s tempo of capability delivery is outpacing hardware-centric acquisition and legacy warfighting patterns. This paper argues that military preeminence increasingly depends on software-defined warfare, where code—not platforms—becomes the decisive differentiator. We characterize this shift through six tenets: rapid adaptability, AI-driven decision support, digital twins and simulation, reprogrammable weapons, autonomous systems, and cyber operations. Together, these tenets demand unprecedented operational agility, ena-bling forces to reconfigure tactics, platforms, and effects during conflict. The same features that enable overmatch also introduce fragility: tightly coupled “kill webs,” vulnerabilities in AI reasoning, and the risk of cascading failure from a single software update. This creates a central Pentagon dilemma: software-enabled capabilities can be fielded faster than they can be objectively assessed. Traditional test and evaluation (T&E), optimized for static hardware designs, is straining under continuous updates and complex interdependencies. We propose a reinvention of T&E—supported by digital twins, AI-augmented testing, DevSecOps pipelines, and independent oversight—and offer recommendations to balance rapid innovation with assurance so software-defined arsenals remain agile and dependable in the fog of war. |
| Description: | Excerpt |
| URI: | https://dair.nps.edu/handle/123456789/5506 |
| Appears in Collections: | Annual Acquisition Research Symposium Proceedings & Presentations |
Files in This Item:
| File | Description | Size | Format | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SYM-AM-26-069.pdf | Excerpt | 1.63 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
| SYM-AM-26-191.pdf | Presentation | 2.72 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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