Pentagon vs. Anthropic: AI Military Tech Sparks Major Clash
A high-stakes dispute regarding the military application of artificial intelligence has publicly escalated this week. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth abruptly terminated Anthropic’s engagements with the Pentagon and other government agencies, using a law typically aimed at countering foreign supply chain threats to label a U.S. company with a 'scarlet letter' designation. President Donald Trump and Hegseth accused the burgeoning AI firm, Anthropic, of endangering national security after its CEO, Dario Amodei, steadfastly refused to concede on concerns that the company's products could be exploited for mass surveillance or autonomous armed drones.
Anthropic, a San Francisco-based company, has declared its intention to sue over Hegseth's decision to designate it a supply chain risk, characterizing the move as 'legally unsound' and 'never before publicly applied to an American company.' This impending legal confrontation could have profound implications for the balance of power within Big Tech during a critical period, as well as for the regulatory frameworks governing military AI use and the essential guardrails established to prevent the technology from posing threats to human life.
The Department of Defense’s classification of Anthropic as a risk to the nation’s defense supply chain will result in the termination of its contract, valued at up to $200 million. The Pentagon has also stated that this designation will forbid other defense contractors from conducting business with Anthropic, although the company disputes the legal authority for such a broad prohibition. Trump announced on Truth Social that most government agencies must immediately cease using Anthropic’s AI, but he granted the Pentagon a six-month grace period to phase out the technology already embedded in military platforms. This grace period effectively creates an opportunity for other companies to obtain the necessary classified security clearances to engage with the agency.
Anthropic, for its part, contends that Hegseth lacks the legal authority to impede business relationships with other defense contractors. The company has clarified that any firm holding a commercial contract can continue to utilize its products for non-defense projects. This distinction is crucial for Anthropic, as the majority of its projected $14 billion in revenue this year is derived from businesses and government agencies employing its AI chatbot and computer coding agent, Claude, for non-military tasks. With over 500 customers paying at least $1 million annually for Claude, the technology has emerged as a formidable alternative to a wide array of established business software tools. However, the supply chain risk label introduces an element of uncertainty, potentially making customers hesitant to use Claude for non-military work and risk incurring Trump’s displeasure, which could, in turn, slow the advance of AI in the U.S.
Despite the commercial pressures, Anthropic and Amodei view this standoff as a platform to champion their agenda for establishing more robust guardrails around how AI operates. The company asserted, 'No amount of intimidation or punishment from the Department of War will change our position on mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons.' In an interview, Amodei portrayed Anthropic’s dispute with the Trump administration as a patriotic stand for democracy, stating, 'Disagreeing with the government is the most American thing in the world.'
Hours after its competitor faced punitive measures, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced that his company had finalized a deal with the Pentagon to supply its AI to classified military networks. Intriguingly, Altman stated in a memo that the same AI restrictions—prohibiting use for mass surveillance or autonomous lethal weapons and emphasizing human involvement in high-stakes automated decisions—that were the sticking point in Anthropic’s dispute are now enshrined in OpenAI's new partnership. The reason for the Pentagon's apparent agreement to OpenAI’s 'red lines' while rejecting Anthropic’s remains unclear. Altman, however, expressed confidence that OpenAI could 'de-escalate things' by collaborating with the Pentagon while adhering to robust safety protections. This turn of events is likely to deepen the animosity between Altman and Amodei, who previously left OpenAI in 2021 partly due to concerns about AI safety. OpenAI also announced raising an additional $110 billion in funding, valuing the company at $730 billion, but may face a potential backlash if its work with the Pentagon is widely perceived by U.S. consumers as prioritizing profit over AI safety.
The Anthropic dispute could also open new avenues for other technology companies. Elon Musk, a co-founder of OpenAI who later had a public falling out with Altman, now oversees the AI chatbot Grok. The Pentagon also intends to grant Grok access to classified military networks, despite concerns about its safety and reliability, and ongoing government investigations into its creation of sexualized deepfake images. Musk has publicly supported the Trump administration in its conflict with Amodei, stating on X that 'Anthropic hates Western Civilization.' Google, with its suite of widely used AI tools based on Gemini technology, could also be a contender for increased business from the U.S. military, though it faces internal pressure from a vocal segment of its workforce urging executives to avoid deals that might contravene the company's former motto, 'Don't be evil.'
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