How Silicon Valley learned to love America, drones and glory
After a decade of building the future, tech’s new guard is going back to the 
American past -- spurring a funding frenzy in defense technology
By Nitasha Tiku and  Elizabeth Dwoskin
February 17, 2024 at 8:00 a.m. EST

Hundreds of bright young technologists have landed in California this weekend 
for a two-day hackathon — a quintessential start-up contest in which teams of 
coders race to build software. But rather than a posh, snack-laden San 
Francisco office, they’ll work in a cavernous 6,000 square-foot warehouse in El 
Segundo, a refinery town southwest of Los Angeles.

And instead of building mobile apps or AI chatbots, competitors will hack 
together surveillance tools, electronic warfare systems, or drone 
countermeasures for the front lines in Ukraine — battlefield technology driving 
a funding frenzy among tech investors.

“[Build] hard tech for the defense of the West,” a hackathon judge wrote on X, 
encouraging applicants. “Defense, Drones. Gundo,” an organizer wrote, using the 
city’s nickname to promote the event.

Until recently, tech workers have bristled at applying the fast and nimble 
start-up ethos to fashion deadly weapons. When Google signed a Pentagon 
contract to develop AI to target drone strikes, thousands petitioned its CEO in 
2018 to cancel it. Such protests spread during the Trump administration, with 
workers railing against plans to sell augmented-reality headsets to U.S. troops 
and facial recognition tools to immigration officials at the U.S.-Mexico border.

But after a decade of pushing a utopian vision of the future, tech’s most 
optimistic pitch is a return to America’s past. Connecting the world is out. 
Rearming the arsenal of democracy is in.

Between 2021 and 2023, investors funneled $108 billion into defense tech 
companies building a range of cutting-edge tools, including hypersonic 
missiles, performance-enhancing wearables and satellite surveillance systems, 
according to the data firm PitchBook, which predicts the defense tech market 
will surge to $184.7 billion by 2027.

Skepticism against defense work has faded for younger generations raised on the 
tumult of foreign wars, a financial crisis and the rising threat of China, said 
hackathon organizer Rasmus Dey Meyer, a 20-year-old junior at Georgetown 
University’s School of Foreign Service.

In the world’s fragile state, Dey Meyer said, “It’s a lot more socially 
acceptable to be unabashedly patriotic in the national interest.”

To some among this new crop of tech workers and start-up founders, defense 
contracting is a higher calling to extend American ideals into the next 
century. This group of (mostly) men believes in hard work, real innovation, and 
family values. They’re eager to accelerate progress for America. And a growing 
number of investors can’t wait to back them.

At least three dozen funds are dedicated to the market, according to the 
Defense Investor Network, investing in newly-coined sectors such as defense 
tech, deep tech, hard tech, and space tech. Most have militaristic branding, 
like Andreessen Horowitz’s American Dynamism fund, General Catalyst’s Global 
Resilience fund, and Shield Capital’s “frontier technologies” fund, which 
boasts the motto: “Mission Matters.” On Wednesday, the prominent start-up 
incubator Y Combinator announced a new fund dedicated to defense, space, and 
robotics.

This public embrace of nationalism marks a massive shift in Silicon Valley, 
where values have long been out of step with the rest of the country, Founders 
Fund partner Trae Stephens said.

The firm’s founder, Peter Thiel, told Stephens in 2014 to locate companies 
building technology to protect American interests that could be sold to the 
Department of Defense. In three years, Stephens, whom Thiel had recruited from 
the CIA-backed data mining start-up Palantir, says he only found one company.

Now there are dozens, including at least seven “unicorns” valued at more than 
$1 billion.

Lobbying budgets have likewise expanded, from VC firms along with companies 
like Anduril, which Stephens co-founded, Shield AI, and Skydio.

This cultural shift has been spurred by a growing unease in tech circles, as 
economic and geopolitical threats collide. Rising interest rates, fragility in 
the global supply chain and China’s rapid militarization have led to fears that 
the United States, and perhaps the industry itself, is vulnerable.

“Russia invaded Ukraine and reminded us why defense technology is not merely 
something to debate in theory,” Katherine Boyle, a partner at Andreessen 
Horowitz said in a November speech at the Defense Venture Summit. “History had 
begun again, and we understood we were entering a new, violent age.”

Ukraine’s ramped-up use of drones prompted the Pentagon to make its notoriously 
arduous procurement process more hospitable to tech start-ups, launching 
initiatives like federally guaranteed loans for investors to fund technology 
deemed critical to national security, improvements that arrived as capital for 
venture funds was drying up.

As the bubble deflated and start-up valuations shrank, “Everyone panicked,” 
said Michael Dempsey, managing partner of the venture firm Compound. Some 
developers wondered if they had wasted their time shuffling around software. 
This period of searching and self-doubt presented an opening for venture firms 
to declare defense tech the next big thing. Even now, he said, investors lack 
conviction about where to focus: “It’s like, is it crypto? Is it climate? Is it 
AI? Is it American dynamism?”

Amid layoffs in tech, the latter has grown appealing. In a Morning Consult 
survey of 441 tech workers last March, 34 percent said they are more likely 
than they were a year ago to apply their skills to military projects and 48 
percent support their employer’s considering defense contracts involving 
battlefield technologies.

“When everything is up and to the right, you don’t have to do the hardest thing 
to make money,” Stephens said. “But it’s not the money printer moment anymore.”
The Silicon Valley-industrial complex

Tech’s military ties predate Silicon Valley, which began in the late 1950s when 
funding from defense and intelligence agencies transformed a stretch of fruit 
orchards into production grounds for mainframes and microprocessors.

Those relationships dwindled during the internet era, then slowly resumed after 
9/11, Margaret O’Mara writes in her 2019 book, “The Code: Silicon Valley and 
the Remaking of America.” Palantir, co-founded by Thiel, was one such company 
formed during the “war on terror,” with backing from the CIA’s venture firm, 
In-Q-Tel.

To keep up with the threat of stateless terrorist networks, the defense 
establishment reversed its Cold War pipeline, turning to private industry 
rather than government-funded labs. The Pentagon launched VC firms and 
sponsored hackathons to build commercial tech that could eventually be sold for 
military use.

Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, efforts have escalated. The head of the 
Defense Department appointed a longtime deputy of Apple CEO Tim Cook to direct 
the Defense Innovation Unit, a division whose aim is to fast track commercial 
tech for national security, a role reporting directly to Secretary of Defense 
Lloyd Austin. In August, the Pentagon unveiled a Replicator program, which will 
rapidly build and field thousands of drones in two years or less.

The Israel-Gaza war has amplified divisions among workers, with more than 500 
Google employees protesting the company’s $1.2 billion contract with the 
Israeli government in December.

Still, the overarching message from elites in both D.C. and Silicon Valley is 
techno-optimism, said Jack Murphy, an Army Special Operations veteran and 
former Army Ranger turned investigative journalist. “We think there is a 
technological solution to everything.” he said. “Are we losing sight of the 
reality of what AI will probably do on the battlefield?”

But rather than out-of-touch, some tech investors present this work as a chance 
to return to mid-century American values. “Faith, family and the flag — the 
very things that used to define our national character — have eroded,” Boyle 
said in her speech at the defense summit, which has become a clarion call for 
financiers and founders. “You win the war against America when it’s nihilism 
all the way down.”
Accelerate, young man!

The clarion call from El Segundo, where the hackathon will take place, is less 
formal. The city, located between a Chevron refinery, a sewage plant, and Los 
Angeles International Airport, was once home to contractors building parts for 
planes, rockets and missiles. Then, in 2002, SpaceX set up shop. Now it’s a 
haven for a growing scene of deadlifting, nicotine gum-chewing, energy-drink 
chugging founders of space, energy, and drone start-ups seeking to bring cool 
back to American manufacturing.

Augustus Doricko, the 23-year-old founder of Rainmaker, a start-up that aims to 
alleviate water scarcity by “seeding” clouds with minerals, called the local 
tech community a “cultural project” that rejected the engineering culture 
prized in San Francisco.

There, one could make $1 million without doing much work or adding any value to 
the world.

Doricko, who sports a hipster mullet, Nike high-tops, and a casual swagger — an 
aesthetic he refers to as “Americana” — looks to eras of great technological 
progress, like the Enlightenment, the Gilded Age, and the 1960s to capture the 
feeling that “it was an aspirational and honorable thing to be an inventor and 
a creator and a builder.”

Software developers seeking a jolt of energy have been so keen to visit that 
Doricko put up bunk beds in Rainmaker’s headquarters to “house pilgrims to the 
Gundo,” he said.

Believers evangelize online as well, with social media bios like, “Ask me why 
consuming energy is good and you should have more babies” and share 
hustle-and-grind mottos that can sound closer to religious hymnals or military 
slogans. “gm. the world desperately needs you to build,” wrote one anonymous 
poster on X, formerly Twitter, using the abbreviation for good morning favored 
by crypto insiders.

Some reject the previous tech era, in particular the protests against Project 
Maven, Google’s work to target Pentagon drones. This worker dissent ultimately 
benefited America’s adversaries, former Google researcher Guillaume Verdon said 
in a recent podcast interview with Joe Lonsdale, a Palantir co-founder and tech 
investor.

“What I saw with my own eyes was cultural subversion within Big Tech,” Verdon 
said. The issue has led him to help create a philosophy called effective 
accelerationism or e/acc, which advocates supercharging technological progress 
through unbridled capitalism. The mantra has become popular in the defense tech 
world, where some adopt the e/acc moniker, occasionally replacing the “e” with 
an American flag emoji.

Others in the field see their work as preventing conflict. “The neoconservative 
warmongers of the past is not something I endorse,” Doricko said. “Defense is 
good, but war is still bad.”

Kat Hendrickson eschewed Big Tech jobs after finishing a PhD in mechanical and 
aerospace engineering in 2022. She wanted to see her research tackle real 
problems in conflict zones.

Still, Hendrickson, a technical director working on fleets of autonomous drones 
at EpiSci, a Poway, Calif.-based start-up, said the word “patriotism” makes her 
freeze up, especially as it has become “really co-opted by the far right,” she 
said.

While the war in Ukraine made it easier to explain her job to friends and 
family, the war in Gaza stirred a lot of internal debate, Hendrickson said.

“Looking at Ukraine, a front line of troops — those are your targets,” 
Hendrickson said. “If you’re looking at Gaza from an Israeli perspective, 
you’re bombing a city. It’s just totally different.”

She and her team discuss safeguards they can put in place if their products are 
later resold and abused, intentionally or not. “I always tell my team that I 
hope we’re all a little bit uncomfortable.”

Meanwhile, Dey Meyer and his hackathon co-organizers are focused on building 
the pipeline of young talent. Their organization, Apollo Defense, aims to 
funnel undergraduates toward creating their own defense tech start-ups or 
working for one.

“This deep sense of uncertainty about the future [that young people have] can 
be molded,” Dey Meyer said. “We have agency in shaping that future. And the way 
that we shape that future is by building the best possible arsenal to make sure 
that war never happens.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2024/02/17/silicon-valley-military-tech-defense-contractors/
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