Pentagon signs a deal with Elon Musk’s xAI to integrate Grok-based AI systems into GenAI.mil

Source Cryptopolitan

The Pentagon has just signed a deal with Elon Musk’s xAI, locking in a plan to plug powerful new AI models into the War Department’s internal system, GenAI.mil, according to a press release on Monday.

This platform, launched as a custom AI hub for the military, is now being loaded with xAI for the Government’s high-level tools, built on Elon’s Grok model.

According to the announcement, the first phase of Grok’s deployment will go begin in Q1 2026. That rollout will make xAI’s systems available at Impact Level 5 (IL5), meaning the Pentagon can use the tools to handle Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) in a secure, day-to-day setting. Personnel will also be able to tap into real-time global insights directly from the X platform, giving decision-makers inside the War Department a faster stream of intel.

Pentagon integrates Grok-based tools into daily operations

In the release, the Pentagon vows that it “will continue scaling an AI ecosystem built for speed, security, and decision superiority.”

These IL5-certified models will support everything from logistics to admin, speeding up how the department processes and shares sensitive but unclassified information.

The War Department is planning for what it calls “decision superiority,” using AI to reduce delays and streamline planning, expecting that to become standard in daily ops.

But while the Pentagon is ramping up AI on one side, Cryptopolitan previously reported that it’s still struggling to get its books in order. On Friday, the Defense Department revealed it failed its annual financial audit… again, for the eighth year in a row, making it literally the only major federal agency out of 24 to have never cleared an audit since Congress made them mandatory in 2018.

The 2025 Agency Financial Report said it found 26 material weaknesses and two big reporting gaps were flagged by auditors, with the most serious one coming from the Joint Strike Fighter Program, a massive multibillion-dollar effort to build one affordable warplane for the Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps, and U.S. allies.

According to the audit, the Pentagon failed to record assets from the Global Spares Pool tied to the fighter jets. Not only were they missing from the books, but the data used to check if they even existed couldn’t be verified.

“The DOD could not provide or obtain accurate and reliable data to verify the existence, completeness, or value of its Global Spares Pool assets for the Joint Strike Fighter Program,” auditors wrote. That failure led to “a material misstatement on the Agency-Wide Financial Statements,” the Pentagon’s report said.

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