U.S. Tech Giants Palantir and Dataminr Embed AI Surveillance in Gaza’s Submit-Struggle Management Grid
American surveillance firms Palantir and Dataminr have inserted themselves into the U.S. military’s operations center overseeing Gaza’s reconstruction, raising alarms about a dystopian AI-driven occupation regime under the guise of Trump’s peace plan.
Since mid-October, around 200 U.S. military personnel have operated from the Civil-Military Coordination Center (CMCC) in southern Israel, roughly 20 kilometers from Gaza’s northern border. Established to implement President Donald Trump’s 20-point plan—aimed at disarming Hamas, rebuilding the Strip, and paving the way for Palestinian self-determination—the center has drawn UN Security Council endorsement.
Yet no Palestinian representatives have joined these discussions on their future. Instead, seating charts and internal presentations reveal the presence of Palantir’s “Maven Field Service Representative” and Dataminr’s branding, signaling how private U.S. tech companies are positioning to profit from the region’s devastation.
Palantir’s Maven platform, described by the U.S. military as its “AI-powered battlefield platform,” aggregates data from satellites, drones, spy planes, intercepted communications, and online sources to accelerate targeting for airstrikes and operations. Defense reports highlight how it “packages” this intelligence into searchable apps for commanders, effectively shortening the “kill chain” from identification to lethal action.
Palantir’s CTO recently touted this capability as “optimizing the kill chain.” The firm secured a $10 billion Army contract over the summer to refine Maven, which has already guided U.S. strikes in Yemen, Syria, and Iraq.
Palantir’s ties to Israel’s military run deep, formalized in a January 2024 strategic partnership for “war-related missions.” The company’s Tel Aviv office, opened in 2015, has expanded rapidly amid Israel’s Gaza operations. CEO Alex Karp has defended the commitment, declaring Palantir the first company to be “completely anti-woke” despite genocide accusations.

Dataminr complements this ecosystem by scraping social media for real-time “event, threat, and risk intelligence.” Starting in the mid-2010s, it provided the FBI with full Twitter access to flag “criminal and terrorist activities,” enabling surveillance of users’ past digital footprints and social connections.
Backed early by the CIA’s In-Q-Tel fund and a Twitter stake, Dataminr has since aided U.S. law enforcement in monitoring Black Lives Matter protests, abortion rights activists, and Gaza ceasefire demonstrators. The Los Angeles Police Department used it this March to flag pro-Palestinian online speech.
These firms’ roles at the CMCC point to an AI-fueled security architecture entrenching Israel’s dominance over Gaza, despite the plan’s vague nod to Palestinian statehood. Maven echoes Israel’s AI targeting systems like Lavender, which has flagged public sector workers as Hamas affiliates for assassination based on opaque criteria. Dataminr’s tools mirror Israeli platforms monitoring Palestinian internet activity. U.S.-Israeli intelligence sharing—exposed by Edward Snowden in 2013 and intensified since October 7—ensures data flows freely, including drone footage and AI analysis on Hamas.

Trump’s blueprint includes an International Stabilization Force (ISF) of multinational troops to manage “Alternative Safe Communities” housing 25,000 Gazans in Israeli-occupied enclaves. Surrounded by fences, cameras, and outposts, entry would hinge on Shin Bet approval, screening for Hamas ties—a net casting wide over Gaza’s public workers. Palantir and Dataminr could map these connections, compile detention lists, and track movements en masse.
Even during the ceasefire, Israeli forces have killed over 340 Palestinians since October 10, per Gaza’s Health Ministry, with bombings persisting. Mohammed Saqr, nursing director at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, told The Guardian: “There isn’t much difference from the period before the ceasefire. Unfortunately, the bombing is still going on.”
This setup recalls past “disengagements” that amplified Israeli control, like Oslo’s telecom dominance or Gaza’s 2005 aerial occupation. Now, U.S. forces and tech partners outsource the labor, testing lethal AI on dwindling Israeli reservists while extracting data for corporate gain.
Microsoft, Google, and Amazon have similarly profited from Gaza’s horrors. The CMCC operates like a “chaotic start-up,” embedding surveillance into Gaza’s political fabric for perpetual profit.