Russia’s war on Ukraine has yielded troves of battlefield data, but Kyiv has no efficient way to share it with NATO friends. The alliance aims to fix that in the new year.
“Ukraine has a lot of data that they want to give to NATO” as part of a joint training center in Poland, said Tom Goffus , the alliance’s assistant secretary general for operations, during a Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance virtual event on Monday. “We're doing a cloud solution for that…to be able to handle large amounts of data from the Ukraine battlefield. And we're hoping that it's going to be operational on NATO cloud in January of 2026.”
The final hurdle involves process, not technology.
“They've got all the equipment to do it,” Goffus said. “What we don't have…is we don't yet have a policy on how to accre

Defense One

America News
The Atlantic
Raw Story
WKOW 27
New York Post Video
KCRA News
The Conversation