3.9 KiB
| type | title | author | url | date | domain | secondary_domains | format | status | priority | tags | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| source | A Timeline of the Anthropic-Pentagon Dispute | TechPolicy.Press | https://www.techpolicy.press/a-timeline-of-the-anthropic-pentagon-dispute/ | 2026-03-27 | ai-alignment | article | unprocessed | low |
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Content
TechPolicy.Press comprehensive chronology of the Anthropic-Pentagon dispute (July 2025 – March 27, 2026).
Complete timeline:
- July 2025: DoD awards Anthropic $200M contract
- January 2026: Dispute begins at SpaceX event — contentious exchange between Anthropic and Palantir officials over Claude's role in capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro (Anthropic disputes this account)
- February 24: Hegseth gives Amodei 5:01pm Friday deadline to accept "all lawful purposes" language
- February 26: Anthropic statement: we will not budge
- February 27: Trump directs all agencies to stop using Anthropic; Hegseth designates supply chain risk
- March 1-2: OpenAI announces Pentagon deal under "any lawful purpose" language
- March 4: FT reports Anthropic reopened talks; Washington Post reports Claude used in ongoing war against Iran
- March 9: Anthropic sues in N.D. Cal.
- March 17: DOJ files legal brief; Slotkin introduces AI Guardrails Act
- March 20: New court filing reveals Pentagon told Anthropic sides were "nearly aligned" — a week after Trump declared relationship kaput
- March 24: Hearing before Judge Lin — "troubling," "that seems a pretty low bar"
- March 26: Preliminary injunction granted (43-page ruling)
- March 27: Analysis published
Notable additional detail: New court filing (March 20) revealed Pentagon told Anthropic sides were "nearly aligned" a week after Trump declared the relationship kaput. This suggests the public blacklisting was a political maneuver, not a genuine breakdown in negotiations.
Agent Notes
Why this matters: Reference document. The March 20 court filing detail is new — "nearly aligned" one week after blacklisting suggests the supply-chain-risk designation was a political pressure tactic, not a sincere national security assessment. This strengthens the First Amendment retaliation claim.
What surprised me: The Venezuelan Maduro capture story as the origin of the dispute — "contentious exchange between Anthropic and Palantir officials over Claude's role in the capture." Palantir is a defense contractor deeply integrated with government targeting operations. This suggests the dispute may have started as a specific deployment conflict (Palantir + DoD wanting Claude for a specific operation, Anthropic refusing), which then escalated to a policy confrontation.
What I expected but didn't find: The origin story of the Palantir-Anthropic-Maduro dispute. Anthropic disputes the Semafor account. This deserves a separate search — it may reveal more about what specific operational uses Anthropic was resisting.
KB connections: Context document for multiple active claims. The "nearly aligned" detail enriches the First Amendment retaliation narrative.
Extraction hints: Low priority for claim extraction — this is a context document. The "nearly aligned" detail could enrich the injunction archive. The Palantir-Maduro origin story is worth a dedicated search.
Context: TechPolicy.Press. Published March 27, 2026. Authoritative timeline document.
Curator Notes
PRIMARY CONNECTION: government-safety-designations-can-invert-dynamics-penalizing-safety WHY ARCHIVED: Reference document for the full Anthropic-Pentagon chronology; the "nearly aligned" court filing detail suggests the blacklisting was a political pressure tactic, strengthening the First Amendment retaliation claim EXTRACTION HINT: Low priority for extraction. Use as context for other claims. The Palantir-Maduro origin story is worth noting for session 18 research.