What comes after the peace dividend

At this year’s RAAIS, I joined Adam Satariano of the New York Times and Dimitrios Kottas, founder of Delian Alliance Industries and formerly Apple's Special Projects Group, for a candid conversation about one of the most taboo, yet increasingly urgent topics in tech: AI and defense.The timing couldn’t be more acute. The war in Ukraine has shown how low-cost drones and software can upend conventional military doctrine. More recently, the escalation of hostilities with Iran has further underscored the volatility of global security and the growing relevance of digital warfare and drone-enabled asymmetric tactics. In the U.S., a second Trump administration has accelerated European defense policy, with Germany, Poland, France, and others pushing military spending to levels unseen since the Cold War. The European Commission plans to deploy €800 billion toward defense by 2029.So: where does that money go? For once, not just to the legacy primes. There’s an opening for new entrants, namely startups building fast, iterating with operational focus, and pushing beyond the traditional defense hardware playbook.

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