SOF-Peculiar—Day One at the Edge of Defense

If there was a single word that defined the opening day of SOF Week 2025 in Tampa, it wasn’t one that the average American keeps in their vocabulary. It was SOF-Peculiar—a term that sounds like a Pentagon punchline but is actually a legal authority and a worldview. It’s how the U.S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) navigates the defense bureaucracy—not around it, but through it, with speed, trust, and an unapologetic devotion to mission.

Day One wasn’t about tech demos or defense deals. It was about people. Specifically, it was about a community of warfighters, innovators, and industry leaders coming together to ask a single, foundational question—What does it take to build the warfighting capability of today while cultivating our capacity for tomorrow?

To listen closely inside the JW Marriott Tampa Bay Ballroom—amidst suits, uniforms, and small business founders trying to crack the code of procurement—was to hear a different language emerge. One of partnership, experimentation, and human-centered design.

Mr. William “Bill” Innes, Deputy Director of Acquisition at SOF Acquisition Technology, and Logistics (AT&L), kicked off the day with clarity and candor. His message—USSOCOM was born out of failure—specifically, the 1980 Desert One disaster, known as Operation Eagle Claw. That failure didn’t just catalyze the creation of SOCOM, it cemented a core lesson, that the best of each service does not always make the best team. And so, SOCOM’s unique acquisition authority was born—not just to procure, but to connect, to adapt, and to think deliberately and creatively when required.

Innes emphasized that speed isn’t just a buzzword—it’s an operational imperative. He outlined how SOCOM acquisition teams prioritize operator input, field solutions faster than traditional DOD processes allow, and balance risk and rigor through digital pathways and experimental platforms like SOFWERX. “If the rest of the DOD is a cruise ship,” one participant remarked, “SOCOM is a speedboat.”

That speed, however, is grounded in trust.

Ms. Melissa Johnson, SOCOM’s Acquisition Executive, delivered that point with the precision of an aerospace engineer and the conviction of a battlefield commander. She reminded the audience that while SOCOM operates across all domains—sea, air, land, cyber, and increasingly space—the throughline is always people. “Humans are more important than hardware,” she said, echoing one of SOCOM’s SOF Truths. Her vision isn’t just about agile tools, but about ethical, human-centered acquisition that reflects the complexity of tomorrow’s threats.

It’s here the term SOF-Peculiar takes on its full meaning—not just describing gear that isn’t bought by the other services, but an approach that resists stagnation. From modifying helicopters with customized fuel tanks to rapid contracting for AI-enabled sensors, SOCOM’s acquisitions are “peculiar” in that they’re built to fit the edge—not the center.

That edge was further sharpened in discussions led by Lisa Sanders and Robin Burke, who walked attendees through the SBIR/STTR pipeline. Their data point? SOCOM leads the government with a 40% transition rate from innovation to application—a testament to the command’s refusal to waste time (or taxpayer dollars) on theoretical tech that can’t meet an operational need.

There were lighter moments too. Innes joked about inside rivalry with other presenters and even poked fun at himself for trying to explain AI updates in under two minutes. But the subtext was serious. SOCOM doesn’t have time to entertain legacy thinking when the mission requires clarity, speed, and results.

What was most remarkable about Day One wasn’t the jargon or the tech. It was the ecosystem—the visible architecture of trust between small businesses, operators, acquisition officers, and policy wonks. It was Ashley Farrier, SOCOM’s Small Business Director, personally guiding companies toward the right touchpoints and repeating a mantra not often heard in Washington: “We want you to succeed.”

As the sun set over Tampa Bay, one thing was clear—being SOF-Peculiar doesn’t mean being odd—it means never settling for average. And as Ms. Johnson said in her final remarks, “I can’t think of a single other event that happens in the DOD that is better than this event.”

If Day One is any indication, the future of warfighting won’t be built by chance—but by those peculiar enough to challenge the status quo.


Chad Williamson is a military veteran and is currently pursuing his graduate degree in national security policy. He lives on Capitol Hill with his wife, Dr. Heather Williamson, and their two chocolate labs, Demmi and Ferg.