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Palantir's Grip on Nuclear Security: What They're Not Telling You

A private contractor now sits inside the most sensitive part of U.S. national security

Palantir is now inside the data systems tied to America’s nuclear missiles. A private company is now wired into the digital side of the most dangerous weapons the U.S. has.

They didn’t start with nukes. They spent years working their way into the military: counterterrorism data, surveillance tools, battlefield software. Step by step, they became the company the Pentagon leans on for almost everything digital. The nuclear program was supposed to be the one thing kept off‑limits. It wasn’t.

And this isn’t a small support job. They’re running the data layer the nuclear command system depends on. When a contractor becomes the thing your nuclear arsenal runs through, the government isn’t the only one holding the reins anymore. There’s a private company sitting in the middle.

Palantir’s leaders say the quiet part out loud. They want to be the “operating system of the U.S. military.” They already build tools for targeting and battlefield decisions. Now they’re tied into nuclear operations. That’s not a minor expansion. That’s a shift in who actually has leverage.

They’re also moving into nuclear energy — something they’re calling the Nuclear Operating System, built with a company literally named The Nuclear Company. They pitch it as modernization. But the pattern is obvious: they want to be embedded in every part of nuclear tech, civilian and military.

Double Down News put it plainly: a private contractor is now handling some of the most sensitive nuclear‑related data the U.S. has. The fear isn’t that Palantir is breaking laws. It’s that the government handed over a level of control to a company with its own investors, its own politics, and no public oversight.

This isn’t about liking or disliking Palantir. It’s about the fact that once a contractor becomes essential to a system like this, the government can’t easily take that power back. The public need to start paying closer attention.


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