The Army’s artillery community envisions a future where artificial intelligence will scan the battlefield and tell soldiers where they need to aim the missiles. Now they just have to wait for the technology to mature.

Language learning models aren’t at the point where they can do spatial reasoning or real-time situational awareness and deliver a plan to a soldier to act on. But the Army is working on what they want that to eventually look like, said Maj. Gen. Frank Lozano, who heads Program Executive Office Missiles and Space.

“What it's really tied to is an ability to process a large amount of data tied to multiple massed threats that we might see in the air battlespace, right?” Lozano said Monday at the AUSA annual meeting in Washington, D.C. “The enemy is never going to come at us in

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