Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART V— - ACQUISITION › Subpart Subpart E— - Research and Engineering › Chapter CHAPTER 303— - RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING ACTIVITIES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTERS AND FACILITIES › § 4127
The Department of Defense must create a Defense Innovation Unit and the Secretary of Defense must pick a Director with strong experience in innovation and commercial technology. The Director runs the Unit, reports straight to the Secretary, and can speak directly to the Secretary without getting approval from other officials. The Unit looks for and tests commercial technologies that might help the military. It works to speed up using those technologies, connects the Department with startups, companies, investors, and nontraditional defense firms, and runs programs to strengthen the national innovation base. The Unit coordinates with other parts of the Department, the Joint Staff, and combatant commanders to find real military problems that commercial tech can solve. Using its funds, the Unit can choose projects for service-level innovation groups, give them money, and track their progress. It also leads effort with industry, universities, allies, and partners. The Director must support and join multi-stakeholder research partnerships that aim to create and commercialize technologies for defense. Support can include funding, advice, introductions, sharing ideas about needed solutions, and informing partners about government-owned intellectual property that could be licensed. The Director must send an annual report to the Secretary and the congressional defense committees about these partnerships. The Director may open regional offices inside or outside the United States for outreach. If they do, they must set location criteria, make operating rules, and post that information on a public DoD website. Definitions: multi-stakeholder partnership = combinations of universities, nonprofits, companies, or federal agencies; nontraditional capability = a solution that uses commercial innovation and outside capital with little dependence on existing fielded systems; nontraditional defense contractor = as defined in section 3014.
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Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 4127
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73