Anthropic's ties with Trump administration begin to thaw

Although the Pentagon recently labeled Anthropic a supply-chain risk, the company continues to engage with senior Trump administration officials.
Earlier indications of a warming relationship — or at least a feeling that not all administration factions sought to isolate Anthropic — emerged with reports that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell urged major bank leaders to test Anthropic's new Mythos model.
Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark appeared to confirm this, describing the ongoing dispute over the supply-chain risk label as a “narrow contracting disagreement” that wouldn't affect the company's readiness to brief the government on its newest models.
Then, on Friday, Axios reported that Bessent and White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles met with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei. The White House described the meeting in a statement as an “introductory discussion” that was “productive and constructive.”
“We discussed collaboration opportunities, along with shared methods and protocols for addressing the challenges of scaling this technology,” the White House stated.
Similarly, Anthropic released a statement confirming that Amodei met with “senior administration officials for a productive conversation about how Anthropic and the U.S. government can collaborate on key shared priorities, including cybersecurity, maintaining America's lead in the AI race, and AI safety.”
The company added that it “looks forward to continuing these discussions.”
The conflict between Anthropic and the Pentagon appears to have started after unsuccessful negotiations regarding the military's use of Anthropic's models; the AI company wanted to keep safeguards against the use of its technology for fully autonomous weapons and mass domestic surveillance. (OpenAI quickly announced its own military deal, which triggered some consumer backlash.)
The Pentagon then designated Anthropic as a supply-chain risk — a label typically applied to foreign adversaries that could significantly restrict the government's use of Anthropic's models. The company is contesting that classification in court.
But it appears the rest of the Trump administration does not share the Pentagon's antagonism. An administration source told Axios that “every agency” except the Department of Defense wants to use the company's technology.
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Although the Pentagon recently labeled Anthropic a supply-chain risk, the company continues to engage with senior Trump administration officials.
Earlier indications of a warming relationship — or at least a feeling that not all administration factions sought to isolate Anthropic — emerged with reports that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell urged major bank leaders to test Anthropic's new Mythos model.
Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark appeared to confirm this, describing the ongoing dispute over the supply-chain risk label as a “narrow contracting disagreement” that wouldn't affect the company's readiness to brief the government on its newest models.
Then, on Friday, Axios reported that Bessent and White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles met with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei. The White House described the meeting in a statement as an “introductory discussion” that was “productive and constructive.”
“We discussed collaboration opportunities, along with shared methods and protocols for addressing the challenges of scaling this technology,” the White House stated.
Similarly, Anthropic released a statement confirming that Amodei met with “senior administration officials for a productive conversation about how Anthropic and the U.S. government can collaborate on key shared priorities, including cybersecurity, maintaining America's lead in the AI race, and AI safety.”
The company added that it “looks forward to continuing these discussions.”
The conflict between Anthropic and the Pentagon appears to have started after unsuccessful negotiations regarding the military's use of Anthropic's models; the AI company wanted to keep safeguards against the use of its technology for fully autonomous weapons and mass domestic surveillance. (OpenAI quickly announced its own military deal, which triggered some consumer backlash.)
The Pentagon then designated Anthropic as a supply-chain risk — a label typically applied to foreign adversaries that could significantly restrict the government's use of Anthropic's models. The company is contesting that classification in court.
But it appears the rest of the Trump administration does not share the Pentagon's antagonism. An administration source told Axios that “every agency” except the Department of Defense wants to use the company's technology.
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When Anthropic introduced its Mythos model in April, the company also issued a strong caution to software developers. The model proved so adept at identifying software vulnerabilities, the lab claimed, that it uncovered thousands of high-severity bug
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