
Leaked on GitHub: US government's entire AI plan, what the page website that has now disappeared revealed
President Donald Trump speaks during an event to sign a bill blocking California's rule banning the sale of new gas-powered cars by 2035 in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, June 12, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
The
Trump
administration's plan to integrate artificial intelligence across all federal agencies was accidentally exposed through a
GitHub
repository before being hastily removed, revealing a July 4 launch date for a new AI.gov platform designed to automate government operations.
The GitHub repository vanished shortly after reporters began asking questions, though it was later found archived in GSA's project collection. The AI.gov domain currently redirects to whitehouse.gov.
Tesla's former engineer to lead the AI platform
The leaked repository, discovered by multiple observers and first reported by 404 Media, showed the General Services Administration (GSA) developing a "whole-of-government, AI-first strategy" under the leadership of
Thomas Shedd
, a former Tesla engineering manager now heading the Technology Transformation Services.
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Undo
The AI.gov platform will feature three core components: an AI-powered chatbot, an "all-in-one API" connecting agencies to models from OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic, and a monitoring system called "CONSOLE" that tracks real-time AI usage across government departments.
Trump administration seems to go in in full startup mode
Shedd, described as an Elon Musk ally, reportedly wants GSA to "operate like a software startup" and has pushed for AI tools that other agencies will be required to use. The staging site revealed integration plans with Amazon Bedrock, Meta's LLaMA, and various FedRAMP-certified vendors, though some listed models appear to lack proper government certification.
Internal government reaction to the AI push has been "pretty unanimously negative," according to federal employees who expressed concerns about security vulnerabilities and the potential for AI to introduce bugs into critical systems or recommend terminating essential contracts.
Experts worried about security concerns
The leaked documentation shows CONSOLE will monitor how employees use AI tools and track their preferences, raising questions about workplace surveillance. Experts warn that widespread AI adoption could create significant security risks as these systems process confidential data and personally identifiable citizen information.
The July 4 launch date, as seen on the website, suggests that the Trump administration plans to accelerate AI integration as part of broader government efficiency initiatives championed by Musk's Department of Government Efficiency.
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The Wire
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The conflict in West Asia is unfolding in the wider context of the humanitarian crisis in Gaza of which Iran has been one of the harshest critics and hence a legitimate target for Israel and its chief sponsor, the USA. The war is likely to have far reaching ramifications across the world. But India's digital sphere is not responding with strategic analysis, diplomacy, humanitarian concern or even wisdom. It is flooded with tank emojis, fanboy hashtags, and recycled Modi–Netanyahu selfies. This, however, should not be mistaken as solidarity for Israel. It is a digital hate theatre where communal rage is dressed up as foreign policy. In the aftermath of Hamas' October 2023 attack on Israel and Israel's indiscriminate war on Gaza, a significant portion of anti-Palestinian disinformation on social media and pro-Israel propaganda, often using violent or communal language, was traced to India and in some cases has been amplified by verified Indian handles, including some linked to the ruling party. This online behaviour reflects not geopolitical strategy, but a deeper domestic pathology - one where communal aggression finds its outlet under the cover of international conflict. The right-wing hate-mongers in India don't debate. They bait. 'But what about Hamas?' 'What about Pakistan?' 'What about Muslims and Masjids and skullcaps?' 'What about 1947?' If these were rational questions, one could engage with arguments. Much to our dismay, instead, these are smokescreens, designed to blur moral clarity and reframe nationalism as a shouting match. The tactic employed in the process is whataboutery – probably now the cornerstone of political discourse in India, under the Bharatiya Janata Party. The ruling party, its political influencers and troll networks routinely deploy whataboutery to deflect criticism – on issues ranging from economy, communal violence, human rights, or foreign policy. Rather than engage with facts or ethical questions, their rhetorical moves are designed to shift the spotlight – ensuring no accountability, just perpetually performative outrage. BJP took the good old statecraft. And replaced it with stagecraft. When Israel bombed Iran's consulate in Damascus in April 2024 – a direct violation of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations – there was no outcry from India's hawkish media or foreign policy circles. No prime-time outrage. No tweets about sovereignty. No talk of international law. This silence was not accidental. It was ideological. Iran is a Muslim country and for a large section of India's right-wing digital ecosystem, that alone is reason enough to suspend all concern for legal norms or moral consistency. Strategic thinking? No. It is a segregatory reflex, mistaken for strategy. And like every other, this mistake has a cost. Iran is not an enemy. It's a strategic partner. India defied US sanctions to invest in and develop the Chabahar Port – a critical trade and connectivity route to Central Asia and Afghanistan, and a calculated counterbalance to China's investment in Gwadar Port, Pakistan. In fact, India signed a 10-year agreement to operate Chabahar in May 2024, underscoring its long-term strategic importance despite US pressure and threats of secondary sanctions. Undermining Iran doesn't weaken Pakistan – it weakens India. Every cheer for Iran's isolation is, in effect, a cheer against our own regional leverage and long-term interests. India's foreign policy and strategic partnerships are the culmination of decades of deliberate and principled diplomacy, not accidental alignments. Jawaharlal Nehru's unwavering support for Palestine and Indira Gandhi's leadership in the Non-Aligned Movement laid the foundational groundwork for India's foreign policy. Atal Bihari Vajpayee's proactive engagement with West Asia and Manmohan Singh's careful calibration of relations with Tehran further solidified India's position, ensuring a delicate balance between strategic autonomy, economic imperatives, and moral consistency. This legacy has been instrumental in securing critical oil partnerships, protecting the interests of millions of Indian workers in the Gulf, and maintaining a credible stance with both Israel and Iran. Yet, under the current administration, this hard-earned diplomatic legacy is being squandered, as the BJP prioritises petty politics of hate over the grand strategic vision that once defined India's global standing. The BJP's actions, marked by disinformation campaigns and a disregard for international norms, have not only undermined India's credibility but also jeopardised the delicate balances that previous leaders worked tirelessly to maintain. This indictment of the BJP's approach reveals a troubling shift, where short-term domestic gains are pursued at the expense of India's long-term geopolitical influence. And of course, it never helps to have an external affairs minister who is always on an official visit to some country or think-tank on the taxpayer's money but has somehow miserably failed at converting all these opulent trips into diplomatic gains for the nation. Meanwhile, there is a world beyond hashtags. And it is watching. 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They are well-documented war crimes – codified in international law, recorded by the world's leading human rights bodies and broadcasted across the world in real time. And still, we cheer. Not because it helps India. But because it fits a narrative – a deeply entrenched one, where violence against Muslims is always seen as understandable, even justified and celebrated, and any dissent from that worldview is cast as anti-national. In this framework, foreign policy is not guided by strategic interests or moral principles. It's an extension of domestic bigotry projected onto the global stage. The suffering of thousands of innocent civilians killed in Israeli strikes become irrelevant – because acknowledging it would mean confronting the moral contradictions of the majoritarian politics at home. Support for Israel, in this context, is not about geopolitics. It's about reinforcing a domestic message: that Muslim lives are expendable, Muslim grievances are illegitimate, and any empathy for them is a betrayal of the nation. This is not foreign policy. It is hate and bigotry masked as politics. And in the long run, however, it does not just dehumanise others. It corrodes India's own moral standing, erodes its credibility abroad, projects India as thoughtless at the global stage, and turns legitimate dissent into a punishable offence at home. India today could have occupied a rare and enviable position in global geopolitics - one of moral credibility and strategic relevance. As one of the few major powers with working diplomatic ties to both Israel and Iran, India was uniquely positioned to act as a bridge in an increasingly fragmented world. 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