THE COIN–AI SECURITY DOCTRINE
A Foundational Framework for Creating the SUNY AAS Degree in AI-Integrated Security & Infrastructure Protection
Preparing New York’s Next-Generation Workforce for AI Data Centers, Critical Infrastructure, and Community Safety
A Strategic Academic Proposal Inspired by COIN Principles and Aligned with New York State’s AI, Security, and Workforce Priorities
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**COIN–AI SECURITY:
A New American Doctrine for Protecting AI Infrastructure, Communities, and the Future Workforce**
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I. INTRODUCTION — WHY A NEW DOCTRINE IS NEEDED
America is undergoing a historic technological transformation. Artificial intelligence, cloud ecosystems, autonomous drones, microgrids, IoT-connected campuses, and large-scale data centers now form the backbone of the national economy. These systems power everything from healthcare to banking, transportation to education, military readiness to emergency response. But they also introduce vulnerabilities that traditional security disciplines—cybersecurity alone, physical security alone, or emergency management alone—are not equipped to address.
Simultaneously, New York and the nation face a historic shortage of skilled technicians trained to work at the intersection of:
• OT/IT network security
• AI-enabled surveillance
• Drone-integrated perimeter systems
• Alarm and access control technologies
• Public safety technology
• Data center operations
• Behavioral analytics for community safety
This represents both a critical risk and a historic opportunity.
To meet this moment, America needs a new academic doctrine—one that merges emerging technologies with proven principles of stability and population protection. That doctrine is COIN–AI Security.
This narrative establishes the strategic, academic, and operational foundation for the creation of a new SUNY AAS Degree in AI-Integrated Security & Infrastructure Protection at SUNY Farmingdale—modeled after the Electronic Technology AAS that launched thousands of technical careers, including my own.
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**II. WHY COIN? WHY NOW?
THE MODERN CIVILIAN RELEVANCE OF PETRAEUS’ FM 3-24 DOCTRINE**
The Counterinsurgency Manual (FM 3-24), authored under the leadership of General David H. Petraeus and General James Mattis, redefined modern military strategy. But the principles of COIN extend far beyond warfare. COIN’s core ideas include:
1. Understanding the operational environment
2. Protecting the population as the strategic priority
3. Stabilizing critical infrastructure
4. Integrating intelligence for early warning
5. Preventing destabilization before it begins
6. Building local capacity for long-term resilience
These principles now apply directly to America’s modern security challenges, which are hybrid in nature:
• cyber threats
• physical breaches
• drone incursions
• misinformation
• insider risks
• behavioral anomalies
• infrastructure failures
Schools, hospitals, senior facilities, AI data centers, and microgrids are all “population centers” requiring a stability doctrine grounded in COIN logic.
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III. TRANSLATING MILITARY COIN INTO DOMESTIC COIN–AI SECURITY
1. Understanding the Environment → AI Pattern Recognition
COIN doctrine begins with deeply understanding the environment.
Today, that “environment” is a blend of:
• video analytics
• pattern-of-life modeling
• access control data
• IoT sensors
• drone-based mapping
• AI anomaly detection
Students will learn to detect patterns, identify baselines, and recognize strategic shifts—modern equivalents of “reading the terrain.”
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2. Protecting the Population → Securing Campuses, Facilities, and Communities
In COIN, the population is the center of gravity.
In domestic COIN–AI, populations include:
• students
• seniors
• staff
• patients
• public servants
• workers
• families
Students will learn:
• AI-powered 911 & emergency tools (Carbyne)
• Unified command operations (Mark43 CAD/RMS)
• Drone-assisted real-time verification
• Alarm.com-integrated wellness monitoring
• Behavioral threat detection for early intervention
This is population-centric security—the essence of COIN.
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3. Infrastructure Protection → The New Battlefield
FM 3-24 teaches that infrastructure stability equals population stability.
Today, this includes:
• AI data centers
• electrical microgrids
• OT/IT networks
• emergency communications
• cloud platforms
• access-controlled environments
• public safety networks
Students will learn:
• OT segmentation
• cyber-physical threat mapping
• perimeter AI detection
• alarm + video + access system integration
• drone deterrence models
• resilient network design
This is COIN for the digital and physical infrastructures of the 21st century.
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4. Building Local Forces → SUNY Technicians & Veterans
COIN stresses that local forces—not external actors—create lasting stability.
In New York, these local forces will be:
• veterans
• SUNY graduates
• licensed alarm/security integrators
• community safety specialists
• public safety partners
The AAS program becomes the pipeline that produces them.
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5. Intelligence Fusion → AI + Human Judgment
COIN requires multiple channels of intelligence merging into one operational picture.
COIN–AI achieves this through:
• camera analytics
• drone telemetry
• access logs
• sensor inputs
• cyber alerts
• wellness indicators
• NG911 metadata
Students are trained to produce a Unified Security Picture—the foundation of modern protective operations.
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IV. WHY THE DEGREE MUST BE CALLED COIN–AI SECURITY
1. COIN defines the discipline better than any other term
It is:
• stability-based
• pattern-driven
• intelligence-led
• population-focused
• infrastructure-aware
This is exactly what AI-era security demands.
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2. It aligns with New York State’s strategic priorities
New York is investing heavily in:
• AI innovation
• data center expansion
• community safety
• veteran workforce development
• critical infrastructure resilience
COIN–AI sits at the intersection of all these priorities.
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3. It strengthens rather than competes with SUNY’s existing 4-year programs
COIN–AI becomes the new foundation feeding into:
• Security Systems
• Homeland Security
• Emergency Management
• Network Engineering
• Cybersecurity
• Business Management (Security Operations)
It fills a missing gap: the hands-on, technician-level workforce pipeline.
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4. Veterans immediately understand COIN principles
Situational awareness
Pattern recognition
Threat anticipation
Mission execution
These instincts translate seamlessly into COIN–AI roles.
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V. STRUCTURE OF THE AAS PROGRAM
Core Pillars
• AI Data Center Security Operations
• OT/IT Network Convergence
• Alarm, Access & Sensor Integration
• Video Intelligence & Analytics
• Drone Perimeter Operations
• Behavioral Anomaly Detection
• Unified Emergency Response (NG911/CAD)
• COIN Stabilization Principles
• Veteran Leadership & Team Operations
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Capstone Projects
• AI Data Center Protection Blueprint
• Campus COIN–AI Stability Plan
• Drone + Alarm + AI Integrated Perimeter Design
• Community Wellness & Safety Technology Framework
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VI. CONCLUSION — COIN–AI AS THE FOUNDATION OF THE NEW AAS DEGREE
The COIN manual begins with the core idea:
“The purpose of COIN is to provide security and stability for the population.”
In the AI era, this principle becomes the guiding doctrine for protecting:
• AI infrastructure
• campuses
• communities
• digital ecosystems
• critical institutions
COIN–AI teaches SUNY students to:
• interpret patterns
• predict threats
• integrate AI systems
• stabilize environments
• lead in mission-critical situations
This is the heart of the COIN–AI Security Manual to be created for the SUNY AAS Degree Program.
This AAS will become the modern equivalent of the Electronic Technology AAS that launched thousands of careers—including mine. It will prepare a new generation of skilled professionals, veterans, and community protectors for the challenges of America’s AI-driven future.
