U.S. Army's 'Operation Jailbreak': 74 Systems from 59 Companies Integrated into Lattice Platform in First 30 Days
The U.S. Army's Operation Jailbreak—part of the broader 'Right to Integrate' initiative—completed its first 30-day sprint with 74 systems from 59 companies successfully connected to the Lattice battlefield management platform. Using open developer tools, companies completed integrations in days rather than months, dramatically accelerating the deployment of battlefield capabilities.

Highlights
- Operation Jailbreak's first 30-day sprint saw 74 systems from 59 companies successfully integrated into the U.S. Army's Lattice battlefield management platform.
- Open developer tools provided by Lattice reduced system onboarding timelines from several months to just a few days.
- Operation Jailbreak is part of the U.S. Army's Right to Integrate initiative, designed to break down bureaucratic barriers in military procurement and tech integration.
- The open platform approach lowers technical barriers for drone and defense tech vendors, potentially drawing more small and mid-sized companies into Army modernization efforts.
- U.S. Secretary of the Army Dan Driscoll emphasized the need to 'integrate at the speed of digital information,' underscoring the strategic priority of rapid battlefield capability deployment.
U.S. Army's 'Operation Jailbreak': 74 Systems from 59 Companies Integrated into Lattice Platform in First 30 Days
"We must integrate at the speed of digital information." — U.S. Secretary of the Army Dan Driscoll
Record-Breaking Integration Speed
The U.S. Army's Operation Jailbreak has delivered impressive results in its first 30-day sprint: 74 systems from 59 companies have been successfully connected to the Lattice battlefield management platform.
Each company used Lattice's open developer tools to independently complete the integration of their systems and data. Onboarding processes that previously took months have now been completed in a matter of days.
The 'Right to Integrate' Sprint Series
Operation Jailbreak is part of the Army's broader Right to Integrate initiative—a series of accelerated sprints centered on opening Army system architecture and speeding up the deployment of battlefield capabilities. The initiative aims to break down the bureaucratic barriers of traditional military procurement and technology integration, enabling frontline warfighters to access the latest technological capabilities more quickly.
Significance and Impact
The integration results demonstrate that open platform architecture combined with standardized developer tools can dramatically improve the efficiency of military system onboarding. For manufacturers of drones, sensors, and command-and-control systems, Lattice's open-access strategy means lower technical barriers and faster market entry—a development that is expected to attract a greater number of small and mid-sized defense technology companies to participate in Army modernization efforts.
Sources: Official U.S. Army statement and Lattice platform announcements
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