Overview
- Zelenskyy and Palantir CEO Alex Karp met in Kyiv, a Tuesday meeting that officials said will expand AI use across active operations.
- The jointly built Brave1 Dataroom lets vetted teams use real combat imagery and sensor feeds to train software that can spot and stop drones.
- More than 100 companies are now training over 80 models that focus on detecting and intercepting aerial targets in difficult conditions.
- Ukraine says the work has produced a detailed air-attack analysis system, AI tools to process large intelligence batches, and support for deep-strike planning.
- The expansion comes with scrutiny after Switzerland dropped Palantir in 2025 over data-leak risks, even as Palantir reports fast 2026 growth from government contracts.