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Trump officials meet with Anthropic to discuss potential truce amid Pentagon tensions

Trump officials meet with Anthropic to discuss potential truce amid Pentagon tensions

The AI safety company has been labeled a 'supply chain risk' by the Department of Defense, and now both sides are trying to find common ground.

The Trump administration and Anthropic are sitting across the table from each other, trying to figure out whether they can coexist. White House officials met with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei on April 17, 2026, in what was described as a “productive” conversation about the company’s advanced AI models, safety protocols, and federal usage of its technology.

The Pentagon designated Anthropic as a “supply chain risk” earlier this year, and federal agencies were instructed to limit or discontinue use of the company’s products.

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What went wrong between Washington and Anthropic

Anthropic, founded in 2021 by former OpenAI researchers, has built its brand around AI safety. Its models, including the newer Mythos and Fable lines, are designed with guardrails meant to prevent misuse.

Disputes over AI safeguards for military applications began surfacing in early 2026. The Defense Department formally identified Anthropic as a supply chain risk, a designation that effectively poisons a company’s relationship with every federal procurement office.

By mid-June 2026, the situation escalated further. The Trump administration issued new directives restricting foreign access to two specific Anthropic models, Fable 5 and Mythos 5. The stated concern was jailbreak risks, meaning adversaries could potentially bypass the safety mechanisms baked into these systems to extract dangerous capabilities or information.

The truce talks

The April meeting at the White House was followed by additional meetings scheduled with Commerce Department officials for June 15-16, 2026, suggesting a sustained diplomatic effort rather than a one-off conversation.

The agenda reportedly covers three main areas: safety protocols that could satisfy the government’s national security concerns, access frameworks for how Anthropic’s models are distributed internationally, and terms under which federal agencies might resume or expand their use of the company’s technology.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Trump officials meet with Anthropic to discuss potential truce amid Pentagon tensions

Trump officials meet with Anthropic to discuss potential truce amid Pentagon tensions

The AI safety company has been labeled a 'supply chain risk' by the Department of Defense, and now both sides are trying to find common ground.

The Trump administration and Anthropic are sitting across the table from each other, trying to figure out whether they can coexist. White House officials met with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei on April 17, 2026, in what was described as a “productive” conversation about the company’s advanced AI models, safety protocols, and federal usage of its technology.

The Pentagon designated Anthropic as a “supply chain risk” earlier this year, and federal agencies were instructed to limit or discontinue use of the company’s products.

Advertisement

What went wrong between Washington and Anthropic

Anthropic, founded in 2021 by former OpenAI researchers, has built its brand around AI safety. Its models, including the newer Mythos and Fable lines, are designed with guardrails meant to prevent misuse.

Disputes over AI safeguards for military applications began surfacing in early 2026. The Defense Department formally identified Anthropic as a supply chain risk, a designation that effectively poisons a company’s relationship with every federal procurement office.

By mid-June 2026, the situation escalated further. The Trump administration issued new directives restricting foreign access to two specific Anthropic models, Fable 5 and Mythos 5. The stated concern was jailbreak risks, meaning adversaries could potentially bypass the safety mechanisms baked into these systems to extract dangerous capabilities or information.

The truce talks

The April meeting at the White House was followed by additional meetings scheduled with Commerce Department officials for June 15-16, 2026, suggesting a sustained diplomatic effort rather than a one-off conversation.

The agenda reportedly covers three main areas: safety protocols that could satisfy the government’s national security concerns, access frameworks for how Anthropic’s models are distributed internationally, and terms under which federal agencies might resume or expand their use of the company’s technology.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.