Google Cloud has confirmed a new multi-million dollar contract with the NATO Communication and Information Agency to deliver a sovereign cloud environment for the Alliance’s Joint Analysis Training and Education Centre.
The announcement marks a key step in expanding secure digital capabilities for the centre, which manages activities that rely on protected data and controlled environments.
The agreement focuses on giving the centre an offline cloud system supported by artificial intelligence tools.
It is built to help the organisation run workloads that require higher levels of security and strict separation from public networks.
The project also supports NATO’s wider plan to strengthen technological readiness as digital systems become more central to defence operations.
By placing the system within a controlled infrastructure, the centre gains a platform that can evolve with future digital needs.
Sealed cloud setup
The system is based on Google Distributed Cloud for NCIA.
According to the company’s report, this configuration remains disconnected from the internet and from Google’s public cloud.
The setup ensures that sensitive material stays within NATO-controlled boundaries.
The technology will be added to the centre’s operations over the coming months. It will support training activity and analytical work that depend on secure data handling.
By keeping the cloud air gapped, the centre can use modern AI features while maintaining full control of information flow.
This structure lets the centre work with advanced tools without creating exposure to external infrastructure, which remains a priority across NATO systems.
Support for classified workloads
The NATO training centre selected this system to support its classified workloads and operational tasks.
The cloud platform is designed to help the centre modernise its digital environment and run AI-driven processes without external exposure.
With the new setup, the centre can process information in a way that meets strict digital sovereignty requirements.
The structure allows it to scale its systems across different mission needs while keeping full oversight of where data is stored and how it is managed.
The platform is expected to help the centre reduce reliance on older systems and shift key functions to a more flexible environment that works across different operational conditions.
Enhanced capability goals
The statement released on Monday states that the cloud system will provide the NATO centre with improved analytical capabilities and higher operational efficiency.
It also notes that the platform is intended to help strengthen the centre’s wider digital environment as it prepares for future technology demands.
The arrangement highlights the role of industry partnerships in supporting digital development across NATO operations.
By using a sovereign cloud model, the centre expects to improve resilience, security and internal governance while accessing modern tools that support AI-based work.
The project signals ongoing investment in secure digital infrastructure as NATO members continue adapting to rapid advances in cloud and AI technologies.
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