NEED TO KNOW

  • Palantir called national service a "universal duty" in a weekend manifesto
  • The post landed in week seven of the U.S.-Iran war
  • CEO Alex Karp is 58 — well past any draft age

DENVER, CO (TDR) — Palantir Technologies called for universal national service in a weekend X post summarizing CEO Alex Karp's book, pushing the idea as the U.S.-Iran conflict enters its seventh week.

The big picture: A defense contractor holding a $10 billion Army deal is now publicly lobbying for policy that would expand the pool of Americans eligible to fight wars its software helps run.

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  • Palantir's 22-point manifesto draws from Karp and Nicholas Zamiska's 2025 book The Technological Republic
  • The company's Maven Smart System is actively supporting U.S. military operations against Iran

Why it matters: Conscription has been off the table in American life since 1973. A major federal contractor reopening the question — during an active war — changes the political temperature around military draft policy.

  • Roughly 17 million men aged 18 to 25 are registered with Selective Service
  • Women remain exempt despite multiple court challenges
  • Karp and co-founder Peter Thiel, both 58, age out of any plausible draft

Driving the news: The post appeared Sunday on Palantir's official corporate X account and crossed 21 million views within 48 hours.

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  • Point six reads: "National service should be a universal duty"
  • The post calls for moving "away from an all-volunteer force"
  • Palantir framed the argument as shared "risk and the cost" of war
  • The manifesto also endorses AI weapons development and Silicon Valley's "moral debt" to the state

What they're saying: The post drew sharp reactions from both the defense establishment and civil liberties advocates — an unusual alignment that cut across normal partisan lines.

  • Palantir Technologies, corporate statement — "We should, as a society, seriously consider moving away from an all-volunteer force and only fight the next war if everyone shares in the risk and the cost."
  • Engadget described the manifesto as reading "like the ramblings of a comic book villain"
  • Simon Dixon, geopolitical analyst — called the post evidence of "private defense firms shaping national policy"

Yes, but: The shared-risk argument has bipartisan pedigree. Representative Charles Rangel pushed draft reinstatement bills for two decades on the premise that an all-volunteer force lets elites wage wars their own families never fight.

  • Combat deaths fall disproportionately on rural and working-class communities
  • The officer corps draws from a narrow slice of military families
  • Congressional children serving in post-9/11 wars numbered in single digits

Between the lines: A contractor that profits from every military engagement is not neutral on who should fight them. Palantir's revenue expands with the scope of U.S. operations — the same operations universal service would make politically easier to sustain.

  • First-quarter government revenue hit $373 million, up 45% year over year
  • The Army contract ceiling runs to $10 billion over ten years
  • ICE awarded Palantir a $30 million deportation-tracking contract this spring

What's next:

  • Congressional reaction expected as lawmakers return from recess
  • Selective Service automatic registration remains in implementation phase
  • Karp is set to address defense investors at a Palo Alto client conference

If shared sacrifice is the standard, should the executives and contractors who profit from war be first in line — or is "universal" doing quieter work than it claims?

Sources

This report was compiled using information from Newsweek, AOL/Business Insider, Engadget, official statements by Palantir Technologies, and reporting by AFP.

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