President Donald Trump has signed a National Security Presidential Memorandum on artificial intelligence in the national security enterprise, establishing a sweeping new framework to accelerate the deployment of advanced AI systems across the United States military and intelligence community.
The memorandum, designated NSPM-11 and announced on June 5, directs defence and intelligence agencies to rapidly onboard the most advanced AI models from multiple commercial vendors, build next-generation high-security computing facilities, and ensure that fielded AI systems remain robust, steerable, and controllable under clear Constitutional chains of command.
The directive carries significant implications for the Asia-Pacific region, where the US is engaged in an intensifying technological competition with China over AI capabilities. The memorandum explicitly frames AI as a tool for maintaining American military overmatch against adversaries, with the Department of War having already signed agreements with eight leading AI companies to deploy their capabilities on classified military networks.
According to the White House fact sheet, the memorandum directs the rapid buildout of high-security computing facilities designed to run future AI systems at scale, and establishes an AI National Security Strategic Reserve composed of top non-governmental experts who can be called upon during national security emergencies.
The directive also mandates that the Secretary of War issue an updated policy on autonomy in weapon systems, with annual reviews of key AI guidance across the national security enterprise to keep pace with the rapidly advancing technology frontier.
A notable provision requires that no commercial entity can disable, degrade, or modify an AI system that American military personnel depend on without prior government approval. The White House said this measure prevents private companies from unilaterally undermining defence capabilities, while offering new partnerships with willing technology firms.
The memorandum replaces the Biden administration's NSM-25, which the current administration characterised as an outdated document that burdened AI adoption with ideological mandates and fostered dangerous single-vendor dependencies.
The directive comes as part of a broader push for US AI dominance that includes the July 2025 AI Action Plan, an executive order preventing federal use of AI models with ideological biases, a comprehensive national legislative framework for AI policy unveiled in March 2026, and a separate executive order in June 2026 advancing AI cybersecurity applications.
The administration stated that AI systems will never be used to censor free speech, embed ideological bias, or conduct unlawful surveillance against American citizens. The memorandum reinforces accountability at every level of the command chain, from the President through military commanders and agency heads.
The push for accelerated military AI adoption signals a more assertive US posture in the global technology competition, with direct consequences for security dynamics in the Indo-Pacific. Regional defence partners and technology investors will be watching closely as the US military integrates cutting-edge AI capabilities into operational systems.

