U.S. Army funds AI-based interoperability for C2 networks

Key Points
  • The U.S. Army awarded HERE an SBIR contract to develop an AI-based data integration layer for command-and-control systems without replacing existing infrastructure.
  • The project will use HERE’s enterprise browser platform and academic partners to enable secure interoperability across multiple Army information systems.

The United States Army has awarded a Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) contract to enterprise browser developer HERE to build an artificial intelligence–based data interoperability layer for Army command-and-control systems, the company said on January 21, 2026.

According to a press release from HERE, the project will use the company’s Enterprise Browser platform as a secure foundation to connect separate Army information systems, modernize legacy data formats, and enable data sharing across multiple military applications without replacing existing infrastructure. The work is intended to address long-standing integration challenges across Army command-and-control networks, where systems often operate in isolation due to security and compatibility constraints.

The SBIR award authorizes HERE to develop a browser-based integration layer that allows users to access and exchange data across platforms while maintaining security controls. The company said this approach is designed to unify access to information while preserving existing systems, rather than requiring costly replacement or redesign.

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

As noted by the company, the project will be carried out in partnership with Stony Brook University, involving the university’s Center of Excellence in Wireless and Information Technology (CEWIT) and its Applied Mathematics & Statistics Department. Dr. Manoj D. Mahajan, director of special programs at CEWIT, and Dr. Pawel Polak of Stony Brook’s AMS department will support research and development for the effort.

HERE said the collaboration will focus on developing AI-enabled tools that can operate across multiple data environments while avoiding vendor lock-in, a recurring issue in military information systems. The company described the system as “AI agnostic,” allowing the Army to integrate different models and tools without being tied to a single provider.

“We’re honored to support the U.S. Army’s modernization priorities through our enterprise browser platform,” said Chuck Doerr, co-founder and chief information officer at HERE, in a statement released with the announcement. “This award validates our technology’s ability to solve complex integration challenges in mission-critical environments where security and performance are paramount.”

Dr. Mahajan said the joint effort will focus on improving analyst workflows by reducing friction between disconnected systems. “This will increase productivity of workflows between separated systems to assist analysts in a timely, reliable, and accurate methodology using new applied AI technologies,” he said in a statement.

The U.S. Army has prioritized command-and-control modernization as part of broader efforts to improve multi-domain operations, where land, air, sea, space, and cyber forces rely on shared data to coordinate actions. Legacy systems, many of which were built for specific missions or commands, have historically made real-time data sharing difficult, particularly across classified and unclassified networks.

HERE’s approach centers on using a secure enterprise browser as an integration point, rather than introducing new backend systems. The company said this allows the Army to modernize access to data while keeping existing command-and-control architectures intact. The browser-based model is intended to provide controlled access to multiple systems from a single interface, reducing the need for separate logins and manual data transfers.

The SBIR award reflects HERE’s expanding presence in the U.S. defense sector. The company said it has previously worked with highly regulated industries, including global financial institutions, and is now applying similar security and compliance models to military environments. The firm said its technology has been designed to operate in environments where data sensitivity, auditability, and access controls are critical.

The Army has increasingly relied on commercial technology firms to address software integration challenges, particularly in areas where legacy military systems lag behind commercial innovation. Browser-based solutions have gained attention as a way to provide secure access to distributed systems without rewriting underlying software.

HERE said the project will focus on developing a production-ready integration layer that can be deployed across Army command-and-control environments, supporting both operational units and analysts.

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

U.S. Army’s top official tested laser-armed vehicle in New Mexico

The U.S. Army's top civilian official sat down at the operator's seat of a laser-armed pickup truck at White Sands Missile Range in New...

Neros Technologies shrinks its attack drone controller by half

A Los Angeles-based drone technology company has redesigned its ground control station for FPV attack drones to fit on a soldier's body armor, cutting...

U.S. Army tests British-made interceptor to beat drones

The U.S. Army's 52nd Air Defense Artillery Brigade has tested a new low-cost interceptor called Skyhammer in Europe, putting Cambridge Aerospace's system through developmental...

U.S. Army invests $461M to rebuild short-range air defense fast

The U.S. Army is nearly doubling its investment in its primary short-range air defense system for fiscal year 2027, requesting $461 million for the...

DARPA wants to replace GPS dependence with new class of sensors

Every GPS signal on the battlefield is a vulnerability waiting to be exploited, and Russia, China, and Iran have all demonstrated the willingness to...

Russia resumes Su-57 combat flights along the entire front

Russian Su-57 stealth fighters have resumed high-tempo cruise missile operations along nearly the entire length of the Ukrainian front, with Ukrainian air raid monitoring...