US Cyber Command integrates generative AI for enhanced cybersecurity operations
The agency has outlined an AI roadmap with around 100 tasks to embed AI across logistics, security, and defence functions.
A senior official at US Cyber Command has stated that the agency has begun employing generative AI tools to significantly reduce the time required to analyse network traffic for potentially malicious activity. Speaking at an event hosted by the Information Technology Industry Council in Washington, D.C., Executive Director Morgan Adamski said Cyber Command is already observing operational benefits from its efforts to integrate AI across various mission areas, particularly in cybersecurity functions.
Cyber Command developed an AI roadmap last year outlining approximately 100 tasks to embed AI into logistics, security operations, and national defence functions. An AI task force within the Cyber National Mission Force conducts 90-day development cycles to test and integrate large language models and other AI technologies into command operations.
The task force is responsible for deploying, evaluating, and assessing the viability of these tools for broader implementation. The agency also examines how AI can be adopted at scale across its cybersecurity enterprise.
General Timothy Haugh, Commander of Cyber Command, noted last year that the task force was created ‘to move us from opportunistic AI application to systematic adoption.’ Through its Constellation initiative—a collaboration with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)—Cyber Command is working with private-sector AI firms to accelerate the deployment of new capabilities.
One such tool enables continuous Department of Defense Information Network (DoDIN) monitoring, which supports over three million global users daily. Adamski explained that the tool is strategically placed within key segments of the DoDIN where known adversary tactics may appear.
‘We can monitor traffic at those points and have been able to identify previously unseen malicious activity,’ she said. She also highlighted Panoptic Junction, a pilot initiative led by Army Cyber Command that uses AI to monitor network traffic for compliance, threat intelligence, and anomaly detection.
According to Adamski, the project produced results that have prompted considerations for wider adoption across the DoDIN.
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