Anthropic’s relationship with the Trump administration seems to be thawing


Despite recently being designated a supply-chain risk by the Pentagon, Anthropic is still talking to high-level members of the Trump administration.

There were earlier signs of a thawing relationship — or a sense that not every part of the administration wanted to cut off Anthropic — with reports saying that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell were encouraging the heads of major banks to test out Anthropic’s new Mythos model.

Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark seemed to confirm this, claiming that the ongoing fight over the supply-chain risk designation is a “narrow contracting dispute” that would not interfere with the company’s willingness to brief the government about its latest models.

Then on Friday, Axios reported that Bessent and White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles had met with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei. In a statement, the White House described this as an “introductory meeting” that was “productive and constructive.”

“We discussed opportunities for collaboration, as well as shared approaches and protocols to address the challenges associated with scaling this technology,” the White House said.

Similarly, Anthropic issued a statement confirming that Amodei had met with “senior administration officials for a productive discussion on how Anthropic and the U.S. government can work together on key shared priorities such as cybersecurity, America’s lead in the AI race, and AI safety.”

The company added that it’s “looking forward to continuing these discussions.”

Techcrunch event

San Francisco, CA
|
October 13-15, 2026

The dispute between Anthropic and the Pentagon seemingly began after failed negotiations over the military’s use of Anthropic’s models; the AI company sought to maintain safeguards around the use of its technology for fully autonomous weapons and mass domestic surveillance. (OpenAI quickly announced a military deal of its own, leading to some consumer backlash.)

The Pentagon subsequently declared Anthropic a supply-chain risk — a label that’s generally reserved for foreign adversaries and could severely limit the use of Anthropic’s models by the government. The company is challenging that designation in court

But it sounds like the rest of the Trump administration doesn’t share the Pentagon’s hostility, with an administration source telling Axios that “every agency” except the Department of Defense wants to use the company’s technology.

Anthropic sues Defense Department over supply chain risk designation


Anthropic has made good on its promise to challenge the Department of Defense in court after the agency labeled it a supply chain risk late last week.

The Claude-maker filed a complaint against the Department on Monday. The complaint comes after a weeks-long conflict between Anthropic and the DOD over whether the military should have unrestricted access to Anthropic’s AI systems. Anthropic had two firm red lines: it didn’t want its technology to be used for mass surveillance of Americans and didn’t believe it was ready to power fully autonomous weapons with no humans making targeting and firing decisions.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth argued that the Pentagon should have access to AI systems for “any lawful purpose.” A supply chain risk label is usually reserved for foreign adversaries, and requires any company or agency that does work with the Pentagon to certify that it doesn’t use Anthropic’s models. 

Anthropic called the DOD’s actions “unprecedented and unlawful” in a complaint filed in San Francisco federal court. “The Constitution does not allow the government to wield its enormous power to punish a company for its protected speech.”

This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

Anthropic to challenge DOD’s supply-chain label in court


Dario Amodei said Thursday that Anthropic plans to challenge the Department of Defense’s decision to label the AI firm a supply-chain risk in court, a designation he has called “legally unsound.”

The statement comes a few hours after the DOD officially designated Anthropic a supply-chain risk following a weeks-long dispute over how much control the military should have over AI systems. A supply-chain risk designation can bar a company from working with the Pentagon and its contractors. Amodei drew a firm line that Anthropic’s AI will not be used for mass surveillance of Americans or for fully autonomous weapons, but the Pentagon believed it should have unrestricted access for “all lawful purposes.”

In his statement, Amodei said the vast majority of Anthropic’s customers are unaffected by the supply-chain risk designation.

“With respect to our customers, it plainly applies only to the use of Claude by customers as a direct part of contracts with the Department of War, not all use of Claude by customers who have such contracts,” he said.

As a preview of what Anthropic will likely argue in court, Amodei said the Department’s letter labeling the firm a supply-chain risk is narrow in scope.

“It exists to protect the government rather than to punish a supplier; in fact, the law requires the Secretary of War to use the least restrictive means necessary to accomplish the goal of protecting the supply chain,” Amodei said. “Even for Department of War contractors, the supply chain risk designation doesn’t (and can’t) limit uses of Claude or business relationships with Anthropic if those are unrelated to their specific Department of War contracts.”

Amodei reiterated that Anthropic had been having productive conversations with the DOD over the last several days, conversations that some suspect got derailed when an internal memo he sent to staff was leaked. In it, Amodei characterized rival OpenAI’s dealings with the Department of Defense as “safety theater.”

Techcrunch event

San Francisco, CA
|
October 13-15, 2026

OpenAI has signed a deal to work with the DOD in Anthropic’s place, a move that has sparked backlash among OpenAI staff.

Amodei apologized for the leak in his Thursday statement, claiming that the company did not intentionally share the memo or direct anyone else to do so. “It is not in our interest to escalate the situation,” he said.

Amodei said the memo was written within “a few hours” of a series of announcements, including a presidential Truth Social post saying Anthropic would be removed from federal systems, then Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s supply-chain risk designation, and finally the Pentagon’s deal announcement with OpenAI. He apologized for the tone, calling it “a difficult day for the company” and said the memo didn’t reflect his “careful or considered views.” Written six days ago, he added, it’s now an “out-of-date assessment.”

He finished by saying Anthropic’s top priority is to ensure American soldiers and national security experts maintain access to important tools in the middle of ongoing major combat operations. Anthropic is currently supporting some of the U.S.’s operations in Iran, and Amodei said the company would continue to provide its models to the DOD at “nominal cost” for “as long as necessary to make that transition.”

Anthropic could challenge the designation in federal court, likely in Washington, but the law behind the decision makes it harder to contest because it limits the usual ways companies can challenge government procurement decisions and gives the Pentagon broad discretion on national security matters.

Or as Dean Ball — a former Trump-era White House adviser on AI who has spoken out against Hegseth’s treatment of Anthropic — put it: “Courts are pretty reluctant to second-guess the government on what is and is not a national security issue … There’s a very high bar that one needs to clear in order to do that. But it’s not impossible.”

Anthropic CEO goes full techno-optimist in 15,000-word paean to AI


Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei wants you to know he’s not an AI “doomer.”

At least, that’s my read of the “mic drop” of a ~15,000 word essay Amodei published to his blog late Friday. (I tried asking Anthropic’s Claude chatbot whether it concurred, but alas, the post exceeded the free plan’s length limit.)

In broad strokes, Amodei paints a picture of a world in which all AI risks are mitigated, and the tech delivers heretofore unrealized prosperity, social uplift, and abundance. He asserts this isn’t to minimize AI’s downsides — at the start, Amodei takes aim, without naming names, at AI companies overselling and generally propagandizing their tech’s capabilities. But one might argue that the essay leans too far in the techno-utopianist direction, making claims simply unsupported by fact.

Amodei believes that “powerful AI” will arrive as soon as 2026. By powerful AI, he means AI that’s “smarter than a Nobel Prize winner” in fields like biology and engineering, and that can perform tasks like proving unsolved mathematical theorems and writing “extremely good novels.” This AI, Amodei says, will be able to control any software or hardware imaginable, including industrial machinery, and essentially do most jobs humans do today — but better.

“[This AI] can engage in any actions, communications, or remote operations … including taking actions on the internet, taking or giving directions to humans, ordering materials, directing experiments, watching videos, making videos, and so on,” Amodei writes. “It does not have a physical embodiment (other than living on a computer screen), but it can control existing physical tools, robots, or laboratory equipment through a computer; in theory it could even design robots or equipment for itself to use.”

Lots would have to happen to reach that point.

Even the best AI today can’t “think” in the way we understand it. Models don’t so much reason as replicate patterns they’ve observed in their training data.

Assuming for the purpose of Amodei’s argument that the AI industry does soon “solve” human-like thought, would robotics catch up to allow future AI to perform lab experiments, manufacture its own tools, and so on? The brittleness of today’s robots imply it’s a long shot.

Yet Amodei is optimistic — very optimistic.

He believes AI could, in the next 7-12 years, help treat nearly all infectious diseases, eliminate most cancers, cure genetic disorders, and halt Alzheimer’s at the earliest stages. In the next 5-10 years, Amodei thinks that conditions like PTSD, depression, schizophrenia, and addiction will be cured with AI-concocted drugs, or genetically prevented via embryo screening (a controversial opinion) — and that AI-developed drugs will also exist that “tune cognitive function and emotional state” to “get [our brains] to behave a bit better and have a more fulfilling day-to-day experience.”

Should this come to pass, Amodei expects the average human lifespan to double to 150.

“My basic prediction is that AI-enabled biology and medicine will allow us to compress the progress that human biologists would have achieved over the next 50-100 years into 5-10 years,” he writes. “I’ll refer to this as the ‘compressed 21st century’: the idea that after powerful AI is developed, we will in a few years make all the progress in biology and medicine that we would have made in the whole 21st century.”

These seem like stretches, too, considering that AI hasn’t radically transformed medicine yet — and may not for quite some time, or ever. Even if AI does reduce the labor and cost involved in getting a drug into pre-clinical testing, it may fail at a later stage, just like human-designed drugs. Consider that the AI deployed in healthcare today has been shown to be biased and risky in a number of ways, or otherwise incredibly difficult to implement in existing clinical and lab settings. Suggesting all these issues and more will be solved roughly within the decade seems, well, aspirational.

But Amodei doesn’t stop there.

AI could solve world hunger, he claims. It could turn the tide on climate change. And it could transform the economies in most developing countries; Amodei believes AI can bring the per-capita GDP of sub-Saharan Africa ($1,701 as of 2022) to the per-capita GDP of China ($12,720 in 2022) in 5-10 years.

These are bold pronouncements, although likely familiar to anyone who’s listened to disciples of the “Singularity” movement, which expects similar results. To Amodei’s credit, he acknowledges that such developments would require “a huge effort in global health, philanthropy, [and] political advocacy,” which he posits will occur because it’s in the world’s best economic interest.

That would be a dramatic change in human behavior if so, given people have shown time and again that their primary interest is in what benefits them in the shorter term. (Deforestation is but one example among thousands.) It’s also worth noting that many of the workers responsible for labeling the datasets used to train AI are paid far below minimum wage while their employers reap tens of millions — or hundreds of millions — in capital from the results.

Amodei touches, briefly, on the dangers of AI to civil society, proposing that a coalition of democracies secure AI’s supply chain and block adversaries who intend to use AI toward harmful ends from the means of powerful AI production (semiconductors, etc.). In the same breath, he suggests that AI, in the right hands, could be used to “undermine repressive governments” and even reduce bias in the legal system. (AI has historically exacerbated biases in the legal system.)

“A truly mature and successful implementation of AI has the potential to reduce bias and be fairer for everyone,” Amodei writes.

So, if AI takes over every conceivable job and does it better and faster, won’t that leave humans in a lurch economically speaking? Amodei admits that, yes, it would, and that at that point, society would have to have conversations about “how the economy should be organized.”

But he offers no solution.

“People do want a sense of accomplishment, even a sense of competition, and in a post-AI world it will be perfectly possible to spend years attempting some very difficult task with a complex strategy, similar to what people do today when they embark on research projects, try to become Hollywood actors, or found companies,” he writes. “The facts that (a) an AI somewhere could in principle do this task better, and (b) this task is no longer an economically rewarded element of a global economy, don’t seem to me to matter very much.”

Amodei advances the notion, in wrapping up, that AI is simply a technological accelerator — that humans naturally trend toward “rule of law, democracy, and Enlightenment values.” But in doing so, he ignores AI’s many costs. AI is projected to have — is already having — an enormous environmental impact. And it’s creating inequality. Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz and others have noted the labor disruptions caused by AI could further concentrate wealth in the hands of companies and leave workers more powerless than ever.

These companies include Anthropic, as loath as Amodei is to admit it. Anthropic is a business, after all — one reportedly worth close to $40 billion. And those benefiting from its AI tech are, by and large, corporations whose only responsibility is to boost returns to shareholders, not better humanity.

A cynic might question the essay’s timing, in fact, given that Anthropic is said to be in the process of raising billions of dollars in venture funds. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman published a similarly technopotimist manifesto shortly before OpenAI closed a $6.5 billion funding round. Perhaps it’s a coincidence.

Then again, Amodei isn’t a philanthropist. Like any CEO, he has a product to pitch. It just so happens that his product is going to “save the world” — and those who think otherwise risk being left behind. Or so he’d have you believe.