Hegseth and Anthropic CEO set to meet as debate intensifies over the military’s use of AI
WASHINGTON โ Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth plans to meet Tuesday with the CEO of Anthropic, with the artificial intelligence company the only one of its peers to not supply its technology to a new U.S. military internal network.
Anthropic, maker of the chatbot Claude, declined to comment on the meeting but CEO Dario Amodei has made clear his ethical concerns about unchecked government use of AI, including the dangers of fully autonomous armed drones and of AI-assisted mass surveillance that could track dissent.
The meeting between Hegseth and Amodei was confirmed by a defense official who was not authorized to comment publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
It underscores the debate over AI’s role in national security and concerns about how the technology could be used in high-stakes situations involving lethal force, sensitive information or government surveillance. It also comes as Hegseth has vowed to root out what he calls a โwoke cultureโ in the armed forces.
โA powerful AI looking across billions of conversations from millions of people could gauge public sentiment, detect pockets of disloyalty forming, and stamp them out before they grow,โ Amodei wrote in an essay last month.
Anthropic is the only AI company approved for classified military networks
The Pentagon announced last summer that it was awarding defense contracts to four AI companies โ Anthropic, Google, OpenAI and Elon Muskโs xAI. Each contract is worth up to $200 million.
Anthropic was the first AI company to get approved for classified military networks, where it works with partners like Palantir. The other three companies, for now, are only operating in unclassified environments.
By early this year, Hegseth was highlighting only two of them: xAI and Google.
The defense secretary said in a January speech at Muskโs space flight company, SpaceX, in South Texas that he was shrugging off any AI models โthat wonโt allow you to fight wars.โ
Hegseth said his vision for military AI systems means that they operate โwithout ideological constraints that limit lawful military applications,โ before adding that the Pentagonโs โAI will not be woke.โ
In January, Hegseth said Muskโs artificial intelligence chatbot Grok would join the Pentagon network, called GenAI.mil. The announcement came days after Grok โ which is embedded into X, the social media network owned by Musk โ drew global scrutiny for generating highly sexualized deepfake images of people without their consent.
OpenAI announced in early February that it, too, would join the military’s secure AI platform, enabling service members to use a custom version of ChatGPT for unclassified tasks.
Anthropic calls itself more safety-minded
Anthropic has long pitched itself as the more responsible and safety-minded of the leading AI companies, ever since its founders quit OpenAI to form the startup in 2021.
The uncertainty with the Pentagon is putting those intentions to the test, according to Owen Daniels, associate director of analysis and fellow at Georgetown Universityโs Center for Security and Emerging Technology.
โAnthropicโs peers, including Meta, Google and xAI, have been willing to comply with the departmentโs policy on using models for all lawful applications,โ Owens said. โSo the companyโs bargaining power here is limited, and it risks losing influence in the departmentโs push to adopt AI.โ
In the AI craze that followed the release of ChatGPT, Anthropic closely aligned with President Joe Bidenโs administration in volunteering to subject its AI systems to third-party scrutiny to guard against national security risks.
Amodei, the CEO, has warned of AIโs potentially catastrophic dangers while rejecting the label that heโs an AI โdoomer.โ He argued in the January essay that โwe are considerably closer to real danger in 2026 than we were in 2023โณ but that those risks should be managed in a โrealistic, pragmatic manner.โ
Anthropic has been at odds with the Trump administration
This would not be the first time Anthropicโs advocacy for stricter AI safeguards has put it at odds with the Trump administration. Anthropic needled chipmaker Nvidia publicly, criticizing Trumpโs proposals to loosen export controls to enable some AI computer chips to be sold in China. The AI company, however, remains a close partner with Nvidia.
The Trump administration and Anthropic also have been on opposite sides of a lobbying push to regulate AI in U.S. states.
Trumpโs top AI adviser, David Sacks, accused Anthropic in October of โrunning a sophisticated regulatory capture strategy based on fear-mongering.โ
Sacks made the remarks on X in response to an Anthropic co-founder, Jack Clark, writing about his attempt to balance technological optimism with โappropriate fearโ about the steady march toward more capable AI systems.
Anthropic hired a number of ex-Biden officials soon after Trumpโs return to the White House, but itโs also tried to signal a bipartisan approach. The company recently added Chris Liddell, a former White House official from Trumpโs first term, to its board of directors.
The Pentagon-Anthropic debate is reminiscent of an uproar several years ago when some tech workers objected to their companiesโ participation in Project Maven, a Pentagon drone surveillance program. While some workers quit over the project and Google itself dropped out, the Pentagonโs reliance on drone surveillance has only increased.
Similarly, โthe use of AI in military contexts is already a reality and it is not going away,โ Owens said.
โSome contexts are lower stakes, including for back-office work, but battlefield deployments of AI entail different, higher-stakes risks,โ he said, referring to the use of lethal force or weapons like nuclear arms. โMilitary users are aware of these risks and have been thinking about mitigation for almost a decade.โ
___
O’Brien reported from Providence, Rhode Island.
Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.