(Re)Claiming our deterrence
As SOF Week 2025 opens in Tampa on Monday, two messages may shape every interaction while speaking to the urgency of now. The first—Palmer Luckey’s very vivid TED Talk, depicting a catastrophic failure of deterrence in a Taiwan invasion scenario. The second—a newly penned Letter to the Force by Secretary of the Army Dan Driscoll and General Randy George, launching the Army Transformation Initiative (ATI). This initiative was catalyzed by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth’s directive on Army Transformation and Acquisition Reform.
Luckey warns, “Our sheer shortage of tools and platforms means we can’t even get into the fight.” The Army’s top leaders now agree: “Adaptation is no longer an advantage — it’s a requirement for survival.”
This alignment—between defense industry disruptors and senior military leadership—could define the strategic tone of SOF Week 2025.
Belief, Not Bureaucracy
In his seminal RAND paper, Understanding Deterrence, senior political scientist Mike Mazarr argues that deterrence is about shaping the thinking of a potential aggressor. The adversary must believe they cannot win. “Countries only go to war,” Luckey reminds us, “when they disagree as to who the victor will be.”
That belief must be built through capability, posture, and speed. The Army’s ATI speaks directly to this by promising to “ruthlessly prioritize fighting formations” and eliminate “outdated crewed attack aircraft” and “obsolete UAVs.” Deterrence requires not just the right message—but the right mix of manpower, machine, and mindset.
Mazarr’s distinction is essential: deterrence is “an effort to stop or prevent an action,” whereas compellence is “an effort to force an actor to do something.” In an age of AI-enabled conflict, deterrence must be anticipatory, agile, and deeply embedded in both policy and platforms.
Moral Clarity, Not Moral Paralysis
Luckey does not sidestep the ethics of autonomy. “There’s no moral high ground in saying, ‘I refuse to use AI’… That’s an abdication of responsibility.”
This reflects a vital distinction drawn by psychologist Albert Bandura, who showed how moral disengagement allows institutions to rationalize inaction—even when that inaction leads to greater harm. Refusing to develop and deploy ethical, AI-enhanced systems while authoritarian regimes accelerate unchecked is not principled restraint—it is strategic negligence.
The Army’s transformation doctrine is equally clear-eyed…
“Yesterday’s weapons will not win tomorrow’s wars.” Avoiding AI doesn’t preserve morality—it cedes it to regimes unburdened by ethical norms.
Speed Meets Strategic Imagination
Luckey founded Anduril to bypass traditional procurement delays. “We took [Roadrunner] from napkin sketch to real-world combat-validated capability in less than 24 months,” he said. In contrast, many legacy systems take a decade just to test.
SOF Week is the proving ground for a new kind of defense future. From live SOCOM and startup demos to Accelerator Alley, this isn’t just a trade show—it’s a warfighting lab. The Army’s letter signals permission—and expectation—for rapid iteration, capability-first approaches, and a ruthless focus on impact.
Innovation leaders like Adam Jay Harrison and Stephen Rodriguez have long called for distributed, venture-style ecosystems in national security that mirror tech sector agility. SOF, historically adaptive and decentralized, is already optimized for this. SOF Week 2025 becomes the convergence point of operational demand and innovation supply.
Default to Decision Advantage
“China has the world’s largest navy, with 232 times the shipbuilding capacity of the United States,” Luckey warned. “We’ll never meet China’s numerical advantage through traditional means—nor should we try.”
The Army’s response is unapologetic: “We are trading weight for speed, and mass for decisive force.” This is the essence of SOF design. Multi-Domain Task Forces (MDTFs) are evolving to punch above their size, Mobile Brigade Combat Teams are being fielded for increased agility, and AI-integrated command nodes are being prioritized to preserve initiative.
This shift reflects a broader doctrinal evolution toward distributed lethality and survivability in sensor-saturated battlefields. David Ochmanek at RAND has noted, concentrated U.S. forces are increasingly vulnerable in peer conflict scenarios. Decision advantage demands dispersion, speed, and AI-enabled autonomy—principles now embedded in both SOF doctrine and the ATI roadmap.
Luckey put it plainly:
“We need weapons that can be produced at scale, deployed rapidly, and updated continuously.”
That is not just a Silicon Valley ethos—it’s a warfighting imperative.
New Doctrine of Deterrence
The Army’s letter closes with a leadership imperative…
“Our continuous transformation is underpinned by strong, agile leaders who act on their initiative.”
This is precisely the mindset Palmer Luckey champions—a culture of decision advantage, enabled by AI but guided by human resolve.
“Our defenders deserve technology that makes them stronger, faster, and safer,” he said. “Anything less is a betrayal.”
This shift is not about hardware—it’s about harmonizing human intuition with machine intelligence. Defense scholars John Arquilla and David Ronfeldt referred to this as Swarming and the Future of Conflict. In it, they state that “Swarming requires complex organizational innovations and more information structuring and processing capabilities than do the earlier paradigms.”
That’s not tomorrow’s concept—it’s today’s necessity.
TED to Tampa
Let’s be clear, deterrence isn’t dead, but it is in question. This week in Tampa, we face a choice—whether to merely iterate or to truly transform. With SOF Week upon us, the Army Transformation Initiative in motion, and visionaries like Palmer Luckey issuing a call to action, the window is open to do something rare in national security: act before we’re forced to react.
This We’ll Defend—if we are bold enough to (re)imagine… together.
Chad Williamson is a military veteran and is currently pursuing his graduate degree in national security policy. He lives on Capitol Hill with his wife, Dr. Heather Williamson, and their two chocolate labs, Demmi and Ferg.