Nuclear Command in the Age of Cyber and AI
MTA
How emerging technologies change the risks and controls of nuclear systems
This book examines the profound transformation of Nuclear Command, Control, and Communications (NC3) as it integrates cyber operations and artificial intelligence. It argues that while these technologies can enhance system resilience and situational awareness, they also introduce a vastly expanded attack surface and new failure modes. The text details how digital vulnerabilities—ranging from compromised supply chains and insecure legacy software to the potential for "data poisoning" and adversarial AI—can undermine the integrity of early-warning systems and strategic communications. A central theme is the danger of "compressed decision timelines," where the speed of algorithmic alerts may pressure human leaders into catastrophic miscalculations.
To mitigate these risks, the book proposes a multi-layered defensive framework based on "layered skepticism" and "zero-trust" principles. It advocates for technical safeguards such as memory-safe programming languages, formal verification of critical code, and hardware roots of trust to ensure that systems are "secure by design." The author emphasizes that the "last mile" of nuclear command must remain human-centric, requiring interfaces that expose algorithmic uncertainty and organizational cultures that empower operators to challenge automated recommendations. This technical approach is paired with a call for new international norms and "digital arms control" to prevent a destabilizing AI arms race.
The final section focuses on the necessity of realistic red teaming, wargaming, and rigorous incident response protocols. By simulating "unthinkable" scenarios—such as the interplay between a minor software bug and a geopolitical crisis—the book illustrates how systemic resilience depends on the ability of human-machine teams to manage ambiguity. Ultimately, the work serves as a policy roadmap, urging nuclear-armed states to prioritize strategic stability and human accountability over raw technological speed. It concludes that maintaining the "taboo" against nuclear use in the 21st century requires a disciplined integration of innovation and restraint.
This book is intended for policymakers, defense planners, NC3 system engineers, cybersecurity professionals, and arms control experts who need to understand how emerging technologies affect nuclear strategic stability and want actionable guidance on safeguards, policy, and organizational practices.
January 23, 2026
68,440 words
4 hours 48 minutes
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