Judge calls Pentagon's attempt to "undermine" Anthropic a troubling sign
A district judge questioned the Pentagon's move to place Anthropic — the creator of the Claude AI assistant — on a supply chain risk list. At Tuesday's…
AI-processed from Wired; edited by Hamidun News
Federal court questions Pentagon's decision that could have actually undermined Anthropic — one of the leading AI companies in the USA and developer of the Claude language model. During a hearing on Tuesday, a district judge expressed serious concern about the motives of the Department of Defense, which placed Anthropic on a list of companies representing supply chain risks. According to the judge, such a move looks like an "attempt to undermine" the company, rather than a balanced decision based on specific national security threats.
DoD representatives at the hearing failed to clearly explain the logic of their actions. Inclusion on the supply chain risk list is an extremely serious measure for any technology company. It effectively closes doors to government contracts, frightens institutional investors, and forces corporate partners to reconsider cooperation terms.
For Anthropic, actively working with major American organizations and offering Claude as an enterprise-level tool, such a classification threatened to turn into a catastrophe.
Anthropic was founded in 2021 by Dario Amodei, Daniela Amodei, and other former OpenAI researchers. The company positions itself as an advocate of "constitutional AI" — an approach where models are trained to follow explicitly defined safety principles. In recent years, Anthropic has attracted billions of dollars in investments from Amazon and Google, and its market valuation exceeds $60 billion. Claude is used in medicine, law, finance, and education worldwide.
Most companies falling under supply chain restrictions have documented connections to China's military-industrial complex or other states that Washington views as a strategic threat. Anthropic clearly does not fall into this category — it is an American company with no such connections. This contradiction apparently concerned the court.
The case is unfolding against the backdrop of an acute discussion about the boundaries of government regulation of the AI industry. The US seeks to prevent the transfer of key technologies to geopolitical opponents — a goal shared across the political spectrum. However, tools designed to restrict foreign players have in this case been directed against a flagship of American AI industry. Critics have long warned: broad regulatory authority without clear application criteria can be used arbitrarily.
For the entire AI industry, the outcome of this case will have precedential significance. If the court sides with Anthropic, it will limit the Pentagon's ability to apply supply chain control mechanisms against American developers without specific evidence of violations. If the decision is made in favor of the DoD, this will open the way for systematic pressure on AI companies — with unpredictable consequences for the investment climate and competitiveness of American developers in the global market. Hearings continue.
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