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Palantir CEO Meets Zelenskyy to Deepen Ukraine AI Partnership

The war in Ukraine is increasingly being fought not just on the ground, but in data centres and algorithm labs. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met with Alex Karp, the chief executive of American tech firm Palantir Technologies, in a visit that underlines just how central artificial intelligence has become to Kyiv's military strategy. The meeting signals a deepening partnership between Ukraine and one of the most powerful data analytics companies in the world, as the country looks for every possible advantage against Russia.

1 hour Ago By Iwo Mazur


AI on the Front Lines
Ukraine and Palantir have been working together on a joint initiative called "Brave1 Dataroom," a project designed to turn years of real battlefield data into working AI systems. Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in 2022, Ukraine has accumulated a vast and unique pool of combat information. The goal now is to put that data to work — particularly in detecting and shooting down Russian drones, which have become one of the most persistent threats to Ukrainian cities and infrastructure.

Defence Minister Mykhailo Fedorov, who shared details of his own meeting with Karp, made clear just how far this effort has already gone. More than 100 companies are currently training over 80 AI models focused on identifying and intercepting aerial targets. That is not a pilot programme — it is a full-scale technological mobilisation. Fedorov, who took office in January with a promise to reshape the military through data and technology, said Ukraine has also built a system for detailed analysis of air strike patterns, rolled out AI tools to process large volumes of intelligence, and woven these technologies directly into the planning of long-range deep strike operations.

Beyond the Battlefield
Zelenskyy noted that the conversations with Karp went beyond purely military matters. The two also discussed how technology and AI development could serve civilian needs — a reminder that Ukraine is simultaneously trying to defend itself and keep the foundations of normal life functioning under extraordinary pressure.

"Today, technology, AI, data analysis and the mathematics of warfare have a direct impact on the outcome on the battlefield," Fedorov said — a line that would have sounded like something from a science fiction film a decade ago but now reads as straightforward military reality. For Ukraine, the message is clear: winning this war means out-thinking the enemy, and right now, that means out-coding them too.
 

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