トランプ大統領、AI企業Anthropicが国防総省の条件を拒否したため全連邦機関に同社の利用停止を命令
米国連邦政府は、国防総省の要求に応じるようAI企業Anthropicに圧力をかけたが、同社が拒否したため、トランプ大統領が全連邦機関に対しAnthropicの利用を中止するよう命じた。
キーポイント
政府とAI企業の対立
国防総省が朝鮮戦争時代の法律を盾にAI企業Anthropicに協力を要求したが、同社は他の主要AI企業とは異なり、自社の条件を曲げずに拒否した。
大統領命令による制裁
Anthropicの拒否を受け、トランプ大統領が全連邦機関に対し、同社のAI技術やサービスの利用を中止するよう命じた。
業界内での孤立
Anthropicは主要AI企業の中で唯一、政府の要求に屈せず、独自のスタンスを貫いたことで、業界内で孤立した立場となった。
法的圧力の背景
国防総省が朝鮮戦争時代の法律を援用してAI企業に協力を強制しようとした点が、今回の対立の法的背景となっている。
影響分析・編集コメントを表示
影響分析
この決定は、AI企業と政府の関係に新たな緊張をもたらし、国家安全保障と企業の自主性の間で難しいバランスが求められることを示している。また、他のAI企業にも同様の圧力がかかる可能性があり、業界全体の政府対応戦略に影響を与えるだろう。
編集コメント
AI企業の社会的責任と政府要求の狭間で起きた象徴的な事件。今後のAI規制議論の重要なケーススタディとなる可能性が高い。

国防総省は、朝鮮戦争時代の法律を根拠にAI企業Anthropicに対し、協力を迫っています。Anthropicはこの要求を拒否し、主要なAI企業の中で唯一、孤立した立場を堅持しています。
本記事「AI企業が国防総省の条件を受け入れず、トランプ氏が全連邦機関にAnthropicの排除を指示」は、The Decoderに最初に掲載されました。
原文を表示
Update:
The Pentagon's deadline has passed, and Anthropic didn't back down. In response, President Donald Trump launched into a tirade on Truth Social, ordering all federal agencies to immediately stop using Anthropic's technology.
Trump accused the AI company of trying to impose its terms of service on the Department of Defense instead of following the Constitution. He called Anthropic a "RADICAL LEFT, WOKE COMPANY" and threatened the "full power of the presidency" along with civil and criminal consequences. Agencies like the Department of Defense get a six-month transition period to phase out Anthropic's technology.
Original article from February 27:
Anthropic holds firm against Pentagon on autonomous weapons and mass surveillance as deadline looms
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has publicly reaffirmed the company's position in the growing conflict with the Pentagon.
Anthropic is holding firm on its two red lines, Amodei says: no mass domestic surveillance (which notably means mass foreign surveillance is apparently fair game) and no fully autonomous weapons.
Amodei emphasizes that Anthropic was the first AI company to deploy its models in classified government networks, national labs, and for national security customers. Claude is already being used extensively for intelligence analysis, simulations, mission planning, and cyber operations, he says.
On autonomous weapons, Amodei's argument is straightforward: today's AI systems just aren't reliable enough to remove humans from the kill chain entirely. Anthropic offered to work with the Pentagon on improving that reliability, according to Amodei, but the Pentagon said no.
On domestic surveillance, Amodei warns that AI can take scattered, individually harmless data points and assemble a comprehensive profile of any citizen, automatically and at massive scale.
Amodei also points out a contradiction in the Pentagon's approach: you can't label Anthropic a supply chain risk and simultaneously invoke the Defense Production Act to declare it essential to national security. Those two things are mutually exclusive, he argues. Despite the threats, Anthropic isn't budging. If the Pentagon pulls Anthropic from its systems, the company says it will ensure a smooth transition to another provider.
Anthropic also says it gave up several hundred million dollars in revenue by cutting off Chinese firms with ties to the Communist Party from accessing Claude and is actively pushing for strict chip export controls. That said, Anthropic clearly has skin in the game here: chip export controls weaken Chinese competitors. And if Chinese firms use Claude to build their own models, that undercuts Anthropic's business long-term. Walking away from that revenue doubles as self-preservation.
Pentagon says it compromised; Anthropic disagrees
Pentagon technology chief Emil Michael told CBS the military made " some very good concessions." Specifically, Michael says the Pentagon offered to acknowledge existing laws formally against domestic surveillance and Pentagon guidelines on autonomous weapons in writing. It also offered Anthropic a seat on the military's AI ethics board, according to Michael. Anthropic called the concessions insufficient. Michael fired back on X, calling Amodei a "liar" with a "God-complex."
[via X](https://the-decoder.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/statement_emil_michael.png)
Asked why the Pentagon won't explicitly guarantee it won't use Anthropic's model for mass surveillance or fully autonomous weapons decisions, Michael said existing law and Pentagon policy already prohibit that. "You have to trust your military to do the right thing," Michael told CBS.
At the same time, Michael stressed the need to prepare for the future and for China's growing use of AI: "So we'll never say that we're not going to be able to defend ourselves in writing to a company." The deadline for Anthropic expires Friday at 5:01 p.m., according to Michael.
What the Defense Production Act can and can't actually do to Anthropic
Legal scholar Alan Z. Rozenshtein breaks down on Lawfare what the Pentagon can actually force using the Defense Production Act (DPA). The Korean War-era law gives the president broad authority to compel companies to deliver goods in the interest of national defense.
According to Rozenshtein, the legal question comes down to what exactly the Pentagon is demanding. There are two possible scenarios. In the first, the Pentagon demands Anthropic deliver Claude without contractual usage restrictions: the same model, just without the clauses barring mass surveillance and autonomous weapons. The government would have a strong case here, Rozenshtein argues, since the product itself stays the same.
In the second scenario, the Pentagon demands Anthropic retrain Claude from scratch and strip the safety guardrails out of the model itself. That's a much harder sell legally, Rozenshtein writes, since it would effectively create a new product and it's unclear whether the DPA can force a company to build something it doesn't offer.
Forced retraining would also raise First Amendment concerns, according to Rozenshtein. If training decisions qualify as editorial decisions, the government would essentially be compelling Anthropic to express values the company rejects.
Rozenshtein flags the same contradiction Amodei raised: the Pentagon can't simultaneously treat Anthropic as a security risk and invoke the DPA to declare it indispensable to national defense. If Anthropic refuses to comply, it faces criminal penalties. The most likely outcome, Rozenshtein writes, is that Anthropic would comply under protest and immediately challenge the order in court.
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