Anthropic is clashing with the Pentagon over AI use. Here’s what each side wants

Anthropic is clashing with the Pentagon over AI use. Here’s what each side wants


Anthropic is at odds with the Department of Defense over how its artificial intelligence models should be used, and its work with the agency is “under review,” a Pentagon spokesperson told CNBC. 

The five-year-old startup was awarded a $200 million contract with the DoD last year. As of February, Anthropic is the only AI company that has deployed its models on the agency’s classified networks and provided customized models to national security customers. 

But negotiations about “going forward” terms of use have hit a snag, Emil Michael, the Under Secretary of War for Research and Engineering, said at a defense summit in Florida on Tuesday.

Anthropic wants assurance that its models will not be used for autonomous weapons or to “spy on Americans en masse,” according to a report from Axios.

The DoD, by contrast, wants to use Anthropic’s models “for all lawful use cases” without limitation. 

“If any one company doesn’t want to accommodate that, that’s a problem for us,” Michael said. “It could create a dynamic where we start using them and get used to how those models work, and when it comes that we need to use it in an urgent situation, we’re prevented from using it.”  

It’s the latest wrinkle in Anthropic’s increasingly fraught relationship with the Trump administration, which has publicly criticized the company in recent months.

David Sacks, the venture capitalist serving as the administration’s AI and crypto czar, has accused Anthropic of supporting “woke AI” because of its stance on regulation.

An Anthropic spokesperson said the company is having “productive conversations, in good faith” with the DoD about how to “get these complex issues right.”

“Anthropic is committed to using frontier AI in support of U.S. national security,” the spokesperson said. 

The startup’s rivals OpenAI, Google and xAI were also granted contract awards of up to $200 million from the DoD last year. 

Those companies have agreed to let the DoD use their models for all lawful purposes within the military’s unclassified systems, and one company has agreed across “all systems,” according to a senior DoD official who asked not to be named because the negotiations are confidential. 

If Anthropic ultimately does not agree with the DoD’s terms of use, the agency could label the company a “supply chain risk,” which would require its vendors and contractors to certify that they do not use Anthropic’s models, the person said.

The designation is typically reserved for foreign adversaries, so it would be a complex blow to Anthropic. 

The company was founded by a group of former OpenAI researchers and executives in 2021, and is best known for developing a family of AI models called Claude

Anthropic announced earlier this month that it closed a $30 billion funding round at a $380 billion valuation, more than double what it was worth as of its last raise in September.

WATCH: Anthropic debuts Sonnet 4.6 model

Anthropic debuts Sonnet 4.6 model



Source

Intel’s stock soars 16% as results top estimates, with chipmaker showing signs of growth
Technology

Intel’s stock soars 16% as results top estimates, with chipmaker showing signs of growth

Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan holds a wafer of CPU tiles for the Intel Core Ultra series 3, code-named Panther Lake, outside the Intel Ocotillo campus in Chandler, Arizona. Courtesy: Intel Intel reported first-quarter earnings Thursday that blew past Wall Street’s expectations, as the struggling chipmaker shows signs of a revival. Shares of the U.S. chipmaker […]

Read More
Meta will cut 10% of workforce as company pushes deeper into AI
Technology

Meta will cut 10% of workforce as company pushes deeper into AI

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg leaves the Federal Courthouse in downtown Los Angeles after defending the company in a landmark social media addiction trial in Los Angeles, United States, on February 19, 2026. Jon Putman | Anadolu | Getty Images Meta plans to lay off 10% of its workforce, equaling about 8,000 jobs, as it continues […]

Read More
Texas Instruments’ stock jumps 18%, heads for best day since 2000 as AI demand soars
Technology

Texas Instruments’ stock jumps 18%, heads for best day since 2000 as AI demand soars

Haviv Ilan, president and chief executive officer of Texas Instruments (TI), speaks during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the grand opening of Texas Instruments’ (TI) new semiconductor wafer plant in Sherman, Texas, US, on Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025. Desiree Rios | Bloomberg | Getty Images Texas Instruments headed for its best day on Wall Street since […]

Read More