Requires the Commandant to report on establishing a Coast Guard office for developing and acquiring unmanned and counter-unmanned systems. Details management, coordination, contracting strategies, and collaboration with federal agencies, and emphasizes integrating AI and machine learning tools in operations.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative provision enacted by the United States Congress with mandatory reporting requirements and specific deadlines for the Coast Guard Commandant.
The document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains, with limited focus on AI system security (2.2) through counter-unmanned systems, and brief mentions of governance structures (6.5) and competitive dynamics (6.4) through cross-agency collaboration. The primary focus is on unmanned systems capabilities rather than AI-specific risks.
The document primarily governs Public Administration excluding National Security and National Security sectors, as it directs the Coast Guard (a government agency) to develop capabilities for its national security and maritime safety missions. It also has minimal coverage of Scientific Research and Development Services through R&D requirements.
The document primarily covers the Plan and Design stage through requirements for developing management and coordination strategies, and the Deploy stage through acquisition and deployment planning. It also addresses Operate and Monitor through data ecosystem development and integration of AI/ML tools for ongoing operations.
The document explicitly mentions AI and machine learning tools as key enablers for unmanned systems operations. It focuses on unmanned systems (surface, undersea, and aircraft) and counter-unmanned systems rather than traditional AI models. No specific AI model types, compute thresholds, or open-source considerations are mentioned.
United States Congress
The document is a section of the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2023, which is enacted by the United States Congress as indicated by the authority field and legislative structure.
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate; Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives; United States Congress
The Congressional committees named in the document serve as the enforcement bodies through their oversight authority, receiving the mandatory report and monitoring compliance with the legislative requirement.
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate; Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of Representatives
The same Congressional committees that receive the report also serve as monitoring bodies, evaluating the Coast Guard's plan and implementation of the unmanned systems capabilities office.
Coast Guard; Commandant of the Coast Guard
The document explicitly targets the Coast Guard Commandant who must submit the report and establish the unmanned systems capabilities office. The Coast Guard as an organization is the entity responsible for implementing the requirements.
2 subdomains (2 Minimal)