Home / Technology / Pentagon Eyes AI Partner Split Over Military Use
Pentagon Eyes AI Partner Split Over Military Use
15 Feb
Summary
- Pentagon may end AI relationship over use restrictions.
- Military seeks AI for weapons, intelligence, and battles.
- Anthropic AI reportedly used in capture of Nicolas Maduro.

The Pentagon is reportedly considering a split with artificial intelligence company Anthropic. This potential separation stems from Anthropic's refusal to grant the U.S. military unrestricted use of its AI models for all lawful purposes, including sensitive areas like weapons development and intelligence gathering.
Months of negotiations have yielded little progress, leading to frustration within the Pentagon. While other AI firms like OpenAI, Google, and xAI are also being pushed to allow broad military access, Anthropic has maintained its stance on certain restrictions, citing concerns over fully autonomous weapons and mass domestic surveillance. Despite these discussions, Anthropic stated that its current conversations with the U.S. government have focused on policy questions rather than specific operational uses.
Notably, Anthropic's AI model, Claude, was reportedly utilized in a U.S. military operation to capture former Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, facilitated through a partnership with data firm Palantir. This development adds a layer of complexity to the ongoing discussions about AI deployment and ethical considerations within military applications.




