# Pentagon
Latest news and articles about Pentagon
Total: 71 articles found

Anthropic Sues Trump Administration After Pentagon Brands AI Firm a ‘Supply-Chain Risk’
Anthropic has sued the U.S. government after the Pentagon declared it a supply‑chain risk, cancelling contracts and blocking use of its Claude AI model in defence systems. The dispute centers on whether vendors can impose ethical limits on military uses of AI, and the case could set a precedent for how the U.S. treats commercial AI suppliers tied to national-security infrastructure.

OpenAI Hardware Chief Quits Over Pentagon Deal, Raising Fresh Questions About AI’s Military Role
OpenAI’s head of robotics and consumer hardware, Caitlin Kalinowski, resigned over concerns that policy safeguards were unclear before the company’s agreement with the US Department of Defense. The move underscores tensions between AI firms, government demand for advanced tools, and internal governance over ethically fraught military and surveillance applications.

Pentagon Warns of Sharp Increase in Strikes Over Tehran as Munitions Strain Forces
U.S. Defense Secretary Hegesse announced a planned sharp increase in strikes over Tehran while acknowledging shortages in key munitions that limit a sustained campaign. The Pentagon is expanding deployments and using overseas bases including Diego Garcia, highlighting the operational dependence on allied support and the risk of wider regional escalation.

Pentagon Warns Prolonged Strikes on Iran Could Exhaust U.S. Air-Defense Stocks and Ignite Wider Conflict
U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran have triggered IRGC reprisals and prompted Pentagon officials to warn that following a weeks-long strike tempo could exhaust U.S. air-defense interceptors. Lawmakers and military leaders say depleted stocks would limit Washington’s ability to protect forces and allies and raise the prospect of an uncontrollable regional escalation.

Pentagon Admits No Intelligence of an Iranian First Strike, Undercutting U.S. Justification for Attacks
In a closed-door briefing, Pentagon officials told Congress they have no intelligence that Iran planned to attack U.S. forces first, undercutting a key justification for recent U.S. and Israeli strikes that killed Iran’s supreme leader. The disclosure has intensified domestic criticism, split public opinion, and raised questions about legal and diplomatic grounds for further escalation.

OpenAI’s Pentagon Deal Deepens Fears of AI Militarisation — and a Trust Deficit
OpenAI announced an agreement with the Pentagon in March 2026, provoking criticism and renewed debate over the militarisation of commercial AI. Observers say the deal highlights tensions between corporate ambitions, public trust, governance gaps and geopolitical competition over advanced AI capabilities.

OpenAI Signs Deal to Put Its Models on Pentagon Networks, Deepening U.S. Military’s AI Turn
OpenAI has agreed to deploy its AI models on the Pentagon’s classified networks, saying the work will adhere to company principles that prohibit domestic mass surveillance and require human control over force. However, reporting suggests those safeguards may not extend to a blanket ban on fully autonomous weapons, deepening debates about the militarisation of commercial AI and its geopolitical consequences.

Anthropic Refuses Pentagon Demand for Unfettered Access to Claude, Citing Conscience and Safety Limits
Anthropic has publicly refused a Pentagon demand for unrestricted access to its AI model Claude, citing ethical and safety limits on mass surveillance and fully autonomous weapons. The Defense Department reportedly threatened to label the company a supply-chain risk and invoke the Defense Production Act; talks between Anthropic's CEO and the defense secretary did not resolve the dispute.

Musk’s SpaceX and xAI Join Pentagon Contest to Build Voice‑Controlled Drone Swarms
SpaceX and xAI have entered a Pentagon $100 million prize challenge to build voice‑controlled autonomous drone swarms, joining a small group of competitors. The move highlights the US military’s reliance on commercial innovators while raising technical, legal and geopolitical questions about autonomy, oversight and proliferation.

Chinese Report Says U.S. Military Used Anthropic’s ‘Claude’ in Venezuela Operation — Raising New Questions About AI’s Role in Warfare
A Chinese outlet reported that the U.S. military used Anthropic’s AI model Claude to analyse imagery and intelligence in an alleged January operation to remove Venezuela’s president. The claim is unverified, but highlights tensions between AI firms seeking use-limiting safeguards and defence customers seeking broad access, and raises urgent questions about oversight and the geopolitics of commercial AI in warfare.

OpenAI Linked to Pentagon Bids to Turn Spoken Orders into Drone‑Swarm Commands
NetEase reported that OpenAI is named in competing Pentagon bids to supply voice‑to‑digital translation for drone‑swarm command software, a narrowly defined role that stops short of direct control or targeting. The work is part of a $100m Pentagon prototype challenge to field autonomous swarms, raising technical, ethical and geopolitical questions about the integration of generative AI into weapons systems.

U.S. Readies Potentially Prolonged Strikes on Iran as Tensions Surge
U.S. officials say military planning is underway for strikes on Iran that could last weeks and extend beyond nuclear targets to security and state institutions. Washington has bolstered forces in the Middle East while Tehran warns of retaliation, raising the risk of a protracted regional confrontation.