The fight between Trump and Anthropic is also about nuclear weapons

President Donald Trump ordered the entire federal government to stop using products from the AI company Anthropic on Friday to stop what he called a “radical left, woke company” from encroaching on the military’s decision-making.

The public feud between the Pentagon and Anthropic which resulted in the firm’s blacklisting has become effectively a proxy for the larger battle over the future governance of AI.

The coverage has focused on Anthropic’s refusal to budge off its two “red lines” — using its product in mass domestic surveillance or to power fully autonomous weapons — and whether Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s Pentagon can be trusted to use powerful software with a looser requirement to only use it in a “lawful” manner, as the administration demands.

But, according to reports this week, the confrontation that sparked the feud actually focused on a different but related issue: how AI might be used in the event of a nuclear attack on the United States.

Semafor and the Washington Post have reported that in early December, Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering Emil Michael asked Anthropic’s Dario Amodei whether, in a scenario where nuclear missiles were flying toward the US, the company would “refuse to help its country due to Anthropic’s prohibition on using its tech in conjunction with autonomous weapons.” Administration sources say Michael was infuriated when Amodei said the Pentagon should reach out and check with Anthropic. Anthropic denies the story and says it was willing to create a carve-out for missile defense, but either way, the conversation poisoned relations between the two institutions. (Disclosure: Vox’s Future Perfect is funded in part by the BEMC Foundation, whose major funder was also an early investor in Anthropic; they don’t have any editorial input into our content.)

As I reported for Vox in November, there’s an active and ongoing debate over whether and how artificial intelligence should be integrated into nuclear command and control systems. We don’t know to what extent it already is, but we do know that the US military is actively looking at ways AI and machine learning can be used “to enable and accelerate human decision-making.”

Discussions around nuclear weapons and AI tend to focus on whether machines would ever be given control of the ability to launch nuclear weapons, and the imperative to keep a “human in the loop” for discussions of the use of humanity’s deadly weapons. But many experts and officials say that debate is the low-hanging fruit: Neither the US, nor any other country, is likely to ever hand over decisions on whether to order a nuclear strike to AI.

A much trickier question is the degree to which AI should be relied on for functions like “strategic warning” — synthesizing the massive amount of data collected by satellites, radar, and other sensor systems to detect potential threats as soon as possible.

This is the sort of hypothetical use case that it sounds like Michael was proposing to Amodei. If the system is only being used to give us a better chance of shooting down an incoming missile, it might seem like a no-brainer.

But in a scenario where the US was under attack by ballistic missiles, the president would immediately be faced with a decision — which would have to be made in only minutes — about whether to retaliate, potentially setting off a full-blown nuclear war.

The lives of millions of people might rely on the system getting it right — and there are plenty of examples from the history of nuclear weapons of detection systems leading to near-misses that were only averted by human intuition.

The technology to do that kind of threat detection likely doesn’t exist yet, which, given the stakes, may have been one reason Amodei was reluctant to commit to this scenario.

Retired Lt. Gen. Jack Shanahan, who flew nuclear missions in the Air Force and was later the head of the Pentagon’s Joint Artificial Intelligence Center, told Vox that if nuclear threat detection and response were turned over to artificial intelligence agents, “I don’t want to say it’s certain that there’s going to be a catastrophe, but I think you’re heading down that path.”

He pointed to a widely-reported study released this week from a researcher at King’s College London which found that AI models including Claude, ChatGPT, and Google Gemini were far more likely than human participants to recommend nuclear options in simulated war games. In this scenario, an AI might not be launching a weapon, but a president would have to overrule a panicked-sounding multibillion-dollar system’s prescription under extreme pressure.

One factor that makes military use of AI different from previous technologies with obvious national security uses is that in this case, much of the cutting edge research was done by private firms that initially had an eye on the commercial market, rather than companies responding to demand from the military. (An example of the latter case would be the internet, which evolved from Defense Department and academic projects long before companies found commercial uses for it.)

The new dynamic is bound to lead to culture clashes, particularly between a company like Anthropic that, though it has been happy until now to let its product be used by the Pentagon, has built its public image around its concerns about AI safety, and Pete Hegseth’s “anti-woke” Pentagon.

“Boeing would never object to building anything the government would ask them to build,” said Shanahan, who led the Pentagon’s controversial 2018 partnership with Google, Project Maven, a previous DC-Silicon Valley culture clash. “It’s a defense-industrial base company. [AI is] being born in a very different world with a group of people who don’t see things the way employees of Lockheed may have seen the Cold War. It’s Mars-Venus to an extent.”

How the clash plays out, and whether other companies are willing to let their models be deployed with fewer questions asked, may go a long way toward determining what role AI might play in a hypothetical nuclear war.

This story was produced in partnership with Outrider Foundation and Journalism Funding Partners.

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Trump directs federal agencies to stop using Anthropic’s AI tech

Updated Feb. 27, 2026, 5:31 p.m. ET WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump said Feb. 27 that he was directing every federal agency to immediately cease work with artificial intelligence lab Anthropic, adding there would be a six-month phaseout for the Defense Department and other agencies that use the company’s products. “I am directing EVERY Federal

Gloria Steinem Gathered Celebrities to Discuss Masculinity. They Argued Over the Dishes

Imagine your dad throwing your birthday party. It’s a chilly Tuesday afternoon on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, but here, inside Gloria Steinem’s cozy, knick-knack-filled apartment, where a guest has just shared this prompt, the atmosphere is warm. Steinem, 91, is hosting one of her occasional “talking circles,” and the topic today is masculinity.

Trump suggests US could carry out ‘friendly takeover’ of Cuba | Donald Trump

Donald Trump has suggested the US could carry out a “friendly takeover” of Cuba as tensions between Washington and Havana reach a new high following the capture of Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro. As he left the White House for a campaigning event in Texas on Friday, Trump said: “The Cuban government is talking with us. They’re

Megan Rapinoe slams USA men’s hockey team over Trump call

Feb. 27, 2026, 1:02 p.m. ET Olympian and soccer legend Megan Rapinoe addressed President Donald Trump’s viral call with the U.S. men’s hockey team on her podcast this week. “The United States men’s hockey team, in their utter moment of glory … ruined it for themselves because they allowed themselves to be totally co-opted by a clown,”

Putin Exposed by Ukraine’s Wicked Witches

Despite pouring vast resources into its defense sector and flooding the frontline with attack drones using Iranian and Chinese technology, Moscow still cannot match Kyiv’s heavy-lift capability. Putin was forced to admit his administration’s failure during his pre-Christmas TV broadcast.   “We are still short of heavy drones like the adversary’s Baba Yaga, but with respect to the number of drones, we are ahead of our adversary in almost all the segments of the frontline,” Putin said.    Ukraine’s Baba Yaga drones — the nickname

Elon, AI and the truth

Despite its ever-widening impact and even greater promise, artificial intelligence has the potential to torpedo careers. That’s the message from JetZero CEO Tom O’Leary who recently warned Elon University students about the consequences of relying too much on AI, which can be inaccurate. Tom O’Leary, CEO and co-founder of JetZero, spoke at Elon University on

DJT Trump Media in talks to spin off Truth Social

Kevin Dietsch | Getty Images Trump Media & Technology Group said Friday that it was exploring a spin-off of Truth Social, the social media platform of choice for President Donald Trump. Truth Social could become a separate, publicly traded company following the forthcoming closing of its merger with fusion power firm TAE Technologies, according to

Elle Fanning’s red carpet looks from her child acting days to now

Feb. 27, 2026, 8:15 a.m. ET See Elle Fanning‘s fashion on the red carpet throughout her career, from child actor to Hollywood starlet. Kevork Djansezian, USA TODAY Elle Fanning and boyfriend Gus Wenner attend the 83rd Golden Globe Awards on Jan. 11, 2026, in Beverly Hills, California. Amy Sussman, Getty Images The “Sentimental Value” star

Bill Clinton to testify in House Jeffrey Epstein probe

Former President Bill Clinton is set to face questions today from members of the Republican-led House Oversight Committee about his ties to Jeffrey Epstein, making him the first sitting or former president to testify before members of Congress in over 40 years. Clinton will be deposed in a closed-door setting one day after the committee questioned his

Trump’s Deportation Crackdown Is Hurting Tourism

This article was produced by Capital & Main, an award-winning publication that reports from California on economic, political, and social issues. It is co-published here with permission. At the Universal Studios Hollywood theme park near Los Angeles, food service worker Sam Nassar doesn’t need a corporate earnings call to know that tourism is down, including

Trump administration ends protections for rare dancing prairie bird

FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) – A ground-dwelling bird known for elaborate mating dances on the southern Great Plains will no longer be federally protected after the Trump administration agreed with arguments by three states and the beef and petroleum industries that the species was listed improperly. Thursday’s delisting by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

New Berkshire CEO Abel Set to Release First Letter Since Taking Over for Buffett

Greg Abel, the new CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, will release his first annual shareholder letter this Saturday after taking over from legendary investor Warren Buffett. The 63-year-old Abel faces the challenge of following Buffett’s famous communication style while addressing the company’s $381.7 billion cash pile and declining stock performance. Greg Abel, the newly appointed chief

Bezos’ Prometheus Eyes Big AI Deal Spree In Industry

as Amazon CEO in 2021. Funding discussions have also reportedly touched JPMorgan’s $10 billion Security and Resiliency Initiative, which aims to strengthen US supply chains in critical industries. Why should I care? For markets: AI is moving from demos to capex. Most AI buzz is about software, but this plan focuses on the “real economy,”

Jeff Bezos’s $30bn AI lab seeking tens of billions for industrial sector deals

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter. Jeff Bezos’ AI lab is raising tens of billions of dollars to acquire companies hit by the technology, seeking to capitalise on the disruption that the Amazon founder anticipates will reshape the industrial sector. Project

China sacks 9 senior military officers as Xi Jinping widens crackdown

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter. China has sacked nine senior military officers, including an army commander in a critical position for a potential attack on Taiwan, in a further sign of leader Xi Jinping’s deepening purge of the People’s Liberation

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x