Artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning, and large language models are no longer emerging technologies; they now reshape global military, commercial, and informational areas. For Special Forces Groups (SFG), the question is not adoption but method: Will it be synchronized and institutional, or fragmented? Special Forces excel at decentralized execution. Special Forces operational detachments - alpha (SFOD-As) innovate in contact, adjust to local conditions, and solve problems with limited direction. This culture is a strength. Yet with complex technologies like AI, decentralized experimentation alone falls short. Without institutional focus, modernization is uneven. Some battalions advance while others lag. Tools multiply without standards, and security measures differ. Lessons learned remain isolated.
A small, dedicated two-person AI Integration Cell at the SFG level institutionalizes innovation, enables decentralized execution, synchronizes AI initiatives, and ensures competitiveness as adversaries rapidly integrate AI.
The Modernization Gap
Across the joint force, modernization initiatives may begin at higher echelons or within specialized technical communities. At the SFG level, implementation often rests on individual initiative. An SFOD-A might experiment with AI-assisted planning tools. An SF battalion might test machine learning-enabled data analysis software. Another unit may invest in enhancements to autonomous systems tied to drones or robotics. Each effort may be well-intentioned. Yet without coordination, several risks emerge:
- Duplication of effort across SF battalions
- Inconsistent training standards
- Divergent tool sets
- Unvetted commercial software adoption
- Uneven security compliance
This may create disparities within the same SFG; SFOD-As may deploy with different technologies, and leaders may lack a clear picture of the group's capabilities. Innovation stays episodic, not institutional, without an AI cell to provide coherence.
Why the SFG Level is the Right Echelon
The SFG is the operational headquarters that coordinates resources and training priorities for SF battalions, and it balances decentralized execution with centralized intent. Placing the AI Integration Cell at this echelon helps to ensure alignment with the SFG commander’s modernization vision and provides reach across the entire formation. At the SF battalion level, personnel turnover and deployments hinder continuity. At higher headquarters, distance from SFOD-A realities reduces practical relevance. The SFG level balances operational proximity and authority. A dedicated cell at this level can:
- Synchronize implementation timelines across SF battalions.
- Serve as the authoritative advisory body to the SFG commander.
- Maintain continuity during leadership handovers.
Institutionalization at the SFG level prevents modernization from becoming a chain of disconnected initiatives.
Supporting Existing Capabilities
The AI Integration Cell is not meant to replace existing technical experts. The SFG has defined roles for robotics, signal, intelligence, and cyber professionals. The two-person cell serves as an integrator, ensuring coordination rather than competition. It can evaluate emerging AI, machine learning, and large language models tools for SFG-level applicability. The cell would also oversee the integration of approved AI capabilities with existing communications, intelligence, and autonomous systems, ensuring technical compatibility, effectiveness, and security compliance for all SF battalions.
The intent is to work directly with robotics and unmanned systems staff to standardize AI-enhanced hardware and software across battalions, and document best practices, technical guidelines, and recommendations for SFG-wide implementation. Additionally, it would advise SF battalions on approved tools and best practices, while capturing and disseminating lessons learned across the formation. Rather than creating another stovepipe, the cell serves as connective tissue between existing specialties.
Standardization Across SF Battalions
Uniform capability does not eliminate tactical creativity. Instead, it provides a shared technological foundation for SFOD-As to operate from. An SFG-level AI Integration Cell ensures that all SF battalions use vetted and approved AI tools. Security guidelines would be consistent across the formation, training requirements would be synchronized, and field innovations would be evaluated and, if effective, standardized. Software updates and system improvements would be implemented and communicated group-wide.
Without such coordination, technological advantage risks being uneven across the formation. Uneven modernization creates operational vulnerability in an era where adversaries leverage AI-enabled targeting, ubiquitous technical surveillance, and influence operations.
Maintaining Competitive Advantage and Continuity
Near-peer and peer adversaries are investing in AI applications, including autonomous systems, data analysis platforms, and information operations. They are not waiting for deliberate doctrinal cycles to adapt. They are rapidly integrating commercially available technologies at scale. SFGs must compete in this environment. The advantage is not just new tools, but coherent, rapid integration.
A dedicated cell can track global trends in military and commercial AI and identify technologies with operational relevance. It can also recommend adoption or mitigation measures while reducing the time between the emergence of technology and its operational implementation. This shortens modernization cycles and preserves decision advantage. SFGs operate in a high-operational tempo environment. Personnel rotate frequently. Leaders transition. Institutional knowledge can dissipate quickly. A standing two-person AI Integration Cell provides persistent subject-matter expertise, a stable modernization focal point, lessons learned, and a single AI point of contact for SF battalions. This continuity prevents repeated trial-and-error and helps ensure that progress builds over time.
Oversight, Security, and Discipline
The AI and large language models have unique security and compliance considerations. Commercial platforms may store data externally, machine learning tools may require integration among existing networks, and autonomous systems may have policy and ethical concerns. In the absence of clear oversight, well-intentioned experimentation can introduce new risk. The group-level cell can establish approved-use frameworks, data / information management standards, vetting procedures for commercial software, and coordination with legal, information security, and operational security authorities. Structured governance does not inhibit innovation. It protects it.
A Small Footprint with Outsized Impact
A small cell ensures agility and avoids bureaucratic expansion by focusing on integration and synchronization—not program management or acquisition. Two knowledgeable professionals, aligned with the SFG commander and empowered to coordinate across staff sections, can influence modernization across hundreds of Soldiers and multiple battalions. The return on investment is substantial: minimal manpower yields group-wide standardization, continuity, and modernization.
Special Forces’ advantage lies in human relationships, cultural understanding, and adaptive leadership. AI does not replace but augments these strengths. The purpose of institutionalizing AI integration is to enhance the SFOD-A’s effectiveness, not change its identity. By deliberately managing adoption, the group ensures that technology supports the force rather than distracts from its core competencies.
Conclusion
AI, machine learning, and large language models are reshaping the operational environment. As adversaries move quickly, SFGs must lead with equal discipline and speed. A two-person AI Integration Cell at the group level institutionalizes modernization and enhances standardization. It unifies adoption, complements expertise, and maintains continuity, offering a key advantage for the future fight.
Author’s Note: CW3 Ernie Hansen is a career Regular Army Soldier and Special Forces Officer, and he currently serves as the commander of a specialized course at the U.S. Army John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School. He has served in multiple tactical, operational, and strategic-level assignments within special operations units. He holds a bachelor’s degree in information technology with a concentration in computer science and a Master of Business Administration in project management. He has experience in modernization, capability integration, and operational planning. The views, opinions, and analysis expressed do not represent those of the U.S. Army or the Department of War.