Project Maven has emerged as the technological centrepiece of the United States’ ongoing military campaign against Iran, marking a fundamental shift in modern combat.
Originally launched in 2017 to help analysts sort through overwhelming amounts of drone footage, the programme has evolved into a sophisticated AI-assisted targeting system.
Maven speeds up the “kill chain,” which is the important time between finding a threat and neutralising it, by combining satellite images, sensor data, and troop intelligence into a single operational “overlay.”
A key feature of the current system is its ability to translate complex battlefield data into natural language, allowing commanders to interact with the AI to weigh various strike options.

While the programme currently uses Anthropic’s Claude model, that partnership is reportedly ending due to disagreements over automating lethal strikes.
The Pentagon is now looking toward other major tech players, including OpenAI, xAI, and Google—the latter of which famously exited the project in 2018 following internal staff protests but has recently softened its stance on defence contracts.
Palantir has since stepped in as the primary contractor, providing the operational backbone that CEO Alex Karp claims can compress targeting timelines from hours to seconds.
While official comments on Maven’s performance during the current conflict are unavailable, the scale of “Operation Epic Fury” suggests its heavy involvement.
In the first 24 hours of the campaign alone, U.S. forces struck over 1,000 targets, maintaining a sustained pace that experts attribute to the unprecedented speed and data-processing power of this AI infrastructure.
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