Close Menu
GunTacGear
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Guns and Gear
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Trending

Platner campaign rocked with damning allegations from another ex-lover as Senate race heats up: report

June 12, 2026

Brad Pitt fights for survival in ‘Heart of the Beast’ trailer as fans say he’s ‘cooler’ than younger actors

June 11, 2026

War or No War – Why Silver Matters More Than Ever

June 11, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
GunTacGear
Subscribe
X (Twitter)
Login
GTG Trusted Journalism in Firearms News
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Guns and Gear
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Tactical
  • Videos
GunTacGear
  • Guns and Gear
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Home»Tactical
Tactical

Air Force experimenting with using AI for promotion boards

By May 11, 20264 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Air Force experimenting with using AI for promotion boards
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The Air Force has quietly assembled an “AI Action Team” to help leaders think through ethical challenges, develop literacy in the force and identify new applications for the tech, the service’s senior enlisted leader said this month.

Among those new uses, CMSAF David Wolfe said, was promotion board screening and ranking. Speaking at an event hosted by Military Officers Association of America May 8, Wolfe suggested that smart computing could help the service improve in what he said was a longtime area of weakness: employing the best personnel.

“We don’t really do talent management in the Air Force; we do replacement management,” he said. “And that’s on us, to try to get way better at that.”

The administrative and policy requirements that come alongside aligning people with jobs have become “way too long of a list,” Wolfe said.

“I get why we do that, but what ends up happening quite frequently is, it might not be the right person at the right place, and we have definitely got to do better,” he said.

Last December, within a week after stepping into his position as senior enlisted airman, he began to assemble the AI action team.

The move, Wolfe said, was spurred by an audience question at a service forum.

“We put, initially, about 30 people on the team — the best from around the Air Force, officer [and] enlisted. Talent is all we want,” he said, adding that candidates with knowledge of current AI developments were prioritized.

“We’ve grown to about 100 people on this team now, and we’re getting ready to roll out what I think will be some meaningful training … to get everybody to a baseline of AI literacy.”

That work, he said, will help the service better explore practical uses for AI as well as ethical and safety guardrails.

“We take our already awesome people and we just level them up and make them even more capable than they already are by automating processes that they don’t have to put a bunch of time and effort into anymore,” he said.

Current experiments with automating portions of the Air Force officer promotion boards process aim to find those efficiencies, he said.

The service is “not letting AI pick [officers], but automating the processes that happen in the background so that when the human looks at it, it’s easy to see, easy to discern and gives us a better chance of making a really good decision as we start to really dive in,” Wolfe said.

Army officials announced last fall that the service was integrating AI into promotion boards to screen out non-competitive candidates and reduce the number of decisions that had to be made by humans.

And Navy officials said in late April that they were expanding a pilot program that recommended next jobs for sailors based on their skills and experience.

As the services contend with a Pentagon mandate to accelerate use and integration of AI tools, leaders have expressed eagerness to use technology to move faster, while acknowledging concerns about trusting it fully.

When the Army announced earlier this year it would use AI tools to update doctrine, a leader of the effort compared AI to a “resourceful and motivated young officer who might not know all the information, but they can certainly assist you in cutting some corners.”

Speaking at the same MOAA forum May 9, Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy John Perryman said his service had seen success with an AI orientation class that about 500 sailors had taken so far.

“Large language models and things like that, with a little bit of training, almost anybody can use,” he said. “And the benefits of getting more people using that technology, you know, we’re just beginning to scratch the surface of that.”

Read the full article here

Keep Reading

Senate committee backs Department of War name change

In US Air Force first, commandos complete grueling Argentine mountain warfare course

Trump vows to seize Iran’s Kharg Island

Air Force cites DEI ban in cancellation of wreath-laying honoring women vets

Army recruiter pleads guilty to stealing the identities of potential recruits for bank fraud

Veterans face higher hurdles in military sexual trauma claims, report finds

Editors Picks

Brad Pitt fights for survival in ‘Heart of the Beast’ trailer as fans say he’s ‘cooler’ than younger actors

June 11, 2026

War or No War – Why Silver Matters More Than Ever

June 11, 2026

7 Homemade Healing Salves from a Century Ago

June 11, 2026

Top 6 Super-Quiet Guns For SHTF Every Prepper Should Own!

June 11, 2026

Top Articles

5 Shocking Facts About .22 LR Rifles They Don’t Want You to Know!

June 11, 2026

Anti-government protesters clash with riot police outside World Cup opener while Shakira performs inside

June 11, 2026

Here’s how San Antonio fans are handling their embarrassing collapse in game four of the NBA Finals

June 11, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) TikTok Instagram
© 2026 GunTacGear. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?