- Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Don’t miss the full story, whose reporting from Matt O’Brien at The Associated Press is the basis of this artificial intelligence-assisted article.

Anthropic’s refusal to allow its Claude AI to be used for autonomous weapons and mass surveillance has triggered a government standoff, a consumer backlash against rivals and a broader debate about AI’s readiness for military use.

• The Trump administration designated Claude a supply chain risk and ordered agencies to stop using it after Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei refused to lift ethical safeguards around autonomous weapons and domestic surveillance.



• Claude surpassed ChatGPT in U.S. phone app downloads for the first time, becoming the most popular iPhone app starting Saturday and the top app across all phone systems on Monday.

• Anthropic has said it will challenge the Pentagon in court once it receives formal notice of the penalties imposed against it.

• Former Navy pilot and robotics expert Missy Cummings criticized Anthropic, arguing the company helped create the problem by overhyping AI capabilities before resisting military applications.

• Cummings published research arguing generative AI should be prohibited from controlling weapons, citing AI’s tendency toward errors — known as hallucinations — that make it “inherently unreliable” in life-or-death situations.

• Anthropic had been the only major AI company approved for use in classified military systems, partnering with Palantir and other defense contractors before the fallout.

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• OpenAI announced a deal with the Pentagon to replace Anthropic’s Claude in classified environments, triggering a 775% surge in one-star ChatGPT reviews on Saturday, prompting CEO Sam Altman to publicly acknowledge the rollout was rushed.

• President Trump indicated the Pentagon would have six months to phase out Anthropic’s military applications, announced around the same time he approved military strikes on Iran.

• Anthropic didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. The Defense Department declined to comment on whether it is still using Claude, including in the Iran war, citing operational security.

READ MORE: Pentagon dispute bolsters Anthropic reputation but raises questions about AI readiness in military

This article was constructed with the assistance of artificial intelligence and published by a member of The Washington Times' AI News Desk team. The contents of this report are based solely on The Washington Times' original reporting, wire services, and/or other sources cited within the report. For more information, please read our AI policy or contact Steve Fink, Director of Artificial Intelligence, at sfink@washingtontimes.com

The Washington Times AI Ethics Newsroom Committee can be reached at aispotlight@washingtontimes.com.

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