EclecticIQ has revealed the launch of its Threat Intelligence Platform that will be used for defence and national security.
Defence organisations and mission partners are being forced to retrofit commercially built threat intelligence tools for mission-critical, doctrine-driven operations, introducing unnecessary friction into environments where tempo, interoperability and trust are non-negotiable.
To address this misalignment, EclecticIQ said that the platform is purpose-built to align cyber-threat intelligence with recognised military doctrine, allied intelligence standards and classification frameworks.
According to the company, today’s threats no longer unfold solely on physical battlefields; they emerge across networks, supply chains and critical infrastructure, where milliseconds shape operational outcomes.
Intelligence must move seamlessly across commands, services and coalition partners.
EclecticIQ highlighted that it has developed Defense TIP to close the gap between commercial threat intelligence platforms and doctrine-driven military operations, eliminating the need for analysts to translate terminology or reformat outputs at critical moments.
Built on EclecticIQ’s years of experience supporting defence and national security organisations, the capability reflects deep operational insight into how intelligence is produced, shared and acted upon in coalition environments.
Cody Barrow, CEO of EclecticIQ commented: “Modern defence depends on digital capabilities nations can trust and control.
“When platforms are not aligned with military doctrine, they create friction in coalition operations.
“In an era where digital sovereignty and trusted interoperability across NATO, allied and national mission environments are strategic priorities, defence organisations need platforms they can control, deploy and integrate on their own terms,” Barrow explained.
The company explained that Defense TIP embeds doctrinal alignment directly into the Intelligence Center platform.
When enabled, it aligns terminology and intelligence production with recognised military doctrine, including US JP 2-0 and NATO AJP-2.
The capability incorporates standardised credibility ratings using the 1–6 scale, NATO and national classification levels, and tagging across intelligence disciplines including HUMINT, SIGINT, OSINT alongside cyber threat intelligence.
It also supports flexible data modelling, enabling defence organisations to integrate cyber and non-cyber intelligence within a unified analytical environment.
To further streamline intelligence production, Defense TIP includes a library of pre-configured templates modelled on established military intelligence products.
ElecticIQ stated that these include:
Each template follows recognised doctrinal structures, ensuring intelligence can be disseminated efficiently in formats commanders and planning staff understand and trust.
Ujval Bucha, Chief Product Officer at EclecticIQ stated: “Intelligence workflows in defence environments are structured and governed by doctrine, yet most threat intelligence platforms are not.
“Defense TIP incorporates recognised classification standards, credibility scales and reporting templates that the defence community relies on.
“That means analysts spend less time reworking outputs and more time generating insights that support planning and execution,” Bucha concluded.
Barrow added: “As cyber capabilities increasingly shape national power and coalition operations become more interconnected, defence organisations need technology built around their operational realities.
“Defense TIP reflects our commitment to strengthening interoperability, supporting digital sovereignty and ensuring intelligence is mission-ready from the outset.”