- Pentagon signs major AI deals to deploy military AI systems
- New AI tools approved for classified military use under “lawful use” rules.
- Anthropic rejects Pentagon AI deal over concerns about surveillance and autonomous weapons
The US Department of Defense has signed up most of the most powerful AI model developers to bring their systems directly into military operations. OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, Nvidia, SpaceX and Reflection AI will all help the Pentagon accelerate the transition to what it calls an “AI-first fighting force.”
The idea is to make AI-powered tools to process information faster and propose decisions in complex environments.
The companies involved have agreed that their tools can be used for “any lawful use,” a very broad standard, too broad, it seems, for Anthropic. Conspicuous by its absence, the Claude developer has been battling with the DoD over how its AI can be used for months. Central to Anthropic’s concerns is how its AI might be deployed for domestic surveillance and fully autonomous lethal systems. Perhaps the company has seen how AI models seem comfortable with nuclear threats in war games.
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The government responded by labeling Anthropic a supply chain risk to block it from defense contracts. Anthropic has appealed that decision.
From laboratory to battlefield
The other companies choose to engage fully in government contracts, accepting broad terms in exchange for access and influence, despite pushback and skepticism from consumers and some of the management of the companies themselves.
There are practical implications for how AI develops in military contexts as a result of the agreement. By moving forward with multiple partners, the Pentagon is reducing its reliance on a single company. Without Anthropic, however, there can be no demand for industry unity.
Defense officials appear to believe that excluding Anthropic could put pressure on them to return to the talks, especially as rival firms deepen their involvement. Whether that approach succeeds remains to be seen.
Still, the DoD is investing heavily in artificial intelligence, with tens of billions of dollars earmarked for programs. The partnerships with private companies make technical sense as they have the most advanced AI models.
Strengths and Abilities
The companies themselves bring different strengths and capabilities, incorporating everything from chips to software to implementation. AI is becoming embedded in the infrastructure of modern warfare at a pace that reflects both competitive pressures and the belief that these systems can deliver a decisive advantage.
What is still less clear is how the boundaries will be defined as the technology matures. Issues of oversight, accountability and unintended consequences are still being worked out, even as implementation is accelerating.
Anthropic persistence does not mean that integration will not happen, but it does make the underlying tensions harder to ignore. Although artificial intelligence is becoming central to national security, there are still unresolved debates about how far it should go and who should decide.
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