France’s Safran.AI, UAE’s TII team up on agentic AI for geospatial intelligence

« We believe that AI agents, [specifically the] new generation of AI capabilities could serve better and more efficiently the clients and the end users, » TII CIO Chawki Kasmi told Breaking Defense

Safran.AI, a subsidiary of French defense giant Safran Group, is cooperating with the UAE-based Technology Innovation Institute (TII) to “develop the next-generation field-ready agentic AI geospatial intelligence (GEOINT) platform,” the firms recently announced.

“We believe that AI agents, [specifically the] new generation of AI capabilities could serve better and more efficiently the clients and the end users,” TII CIO Chawki Kasmi told Breaking Defense during the Dubai Airshow last month. “And this is what we try to bring to the market, to create the tech based on the know-how and the expertise from our colleagues in France, and what we have done in Abu Dhabi to really push innovative solutions that will set us apart.”

Safran.AI Deputy CEO Francois Bourrier Soifer added that the two firms are working “to bring AI in every [piece of] equipment, [and] to make [a] next-generation platform … to transform raw data [into] actionable insight.”

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According to the announcement, the partnership incorporates “Safran.AI’s operational intelligence architecture with TII’s orchestration technology for persistent, all-weather monitoring across diverse imaging sources, delivering an all-in-one, real-time operational picture.”

Generally speaking, agentic AI goes a step further than generative AI. While generative AI can create novel content, AI agents are designed to take limited independent action online — for instance, scanning a network for vulnerabilities. In the case of the Safran-TII arrangement, the companies’ software can be integrated into command and control systems not only to analyze geospatial imagery, but to help make decisions, they said.

“What you could do with agentic AI is to go to the why [beyond answering the ‘what’ question]. This is exactly what the end user wants. It’s not just the ‘what’, the ‘what’ is very useful, but it’s not the end of the story,” Soifer said. “What you want to understand is with that kind of aircraft on the airfield. What is the level of threat for that kind of operation, and it goes beyond the order of battle. It [helps] to understand the situation autonomously.”

According to the executives, under the partnership the companies will create: an agentic geospatial reasoning system to aid operators in decision making, an AI detector factory for creating and recreating AI models using sovereign data from national sources, and an autonomous multisession engine for all-weather geospatial monitoring.

While the partnership was just announced last week, the companies said they have already launched the AI agent and expect an operational version of the software to be ready in 12 months.

The software will apply the “MOSA [Modular Open System Approach] concept,” Soifer said, noting that an army or intelligence agency can integrate the agentic AI into their own existing platforms.

Work on the project will take place in France and the UAE simultaneously, but the companies are looking to share the software beyond the Gulf.

“It’s not only for the Gulf. It’s not only for the UAE. We really think that this is something that could bring value to all the people that need that kind of product,” Soifer said.

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