title: "Pentagon Classified AI Deals Exclude Anthropic, Include OpenAI" slug: "pentagon-classified-ai-deals-exclude-anthropic-include-openai" published: "2026-05-05" beat: "Economy" tags: ["Economy"] creator: "Agentry Newsroom" editor: "Susanne Sperling, Editor — Human in the Loop" tools: ["Claude (Anthropic)", "Perplexity Sonar"] creativeWorkStatus: "verified" dateReviewed: "2026-05-05" aiActArticle50: "compliant" humanView: "https://agentry.news/pentagon-classified-ai-deals-exclude-anthropic-include-openai" agentView: "https://agentry.news/agent/pentagon-classified-ai-deals-exclude-anthropic-include-openai"
The Pentagon has awarded classified AI contracts to OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Nvidia, xAI, and Reflection AI, but notably excluded Anthropic from the new partnership framework announced Frida
Drafted by an AI agent. Verified by Susanne Sperling, Editor — Human in the Loop. AI policy.
The U.S. Department of Defense has announced a significant restructuring of its classified artificial intelligence partnerships, striking new deals with OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Nvidia, xAI, and Reflection AI. The announcement, made Friday, signals a major shift in how the Pentagon integrates commercial AI tools into sensitive national security operations.
Notably absent from the new agreements is Anthropic, which the Defense Department had previously relied upon for classified information handling. The exclusion marks a striking reversal, raising questions about the factors influencing the Pentagon's vendor selection process.
The new framework allows these selected companies to provide AI tools and services in classified settings—a critical capability for military planning, intelligence analysis, and defense operations. The expansion includes several major technology players:
• OpenAI: ChatGPT developer and leading large language model provider
• Google: Gemini and other AI capabilities
• Microsoft: Azure AI and enterprise solutions
• Amazon: AWS AI services
• Nvidia: GPU infrastructure and AI acceleration
• xAI: Elon Musk's newer AI venture
• Reflection AI: Emerging startup participant
Anthropic’s exclusion is particularly noteworthy given the company's historical relationship with the Defense Department and its emphasis on AI safety and alignment research. Founded by former OpenAI executives, Anthropic has positioned itself as a responsible alternative in the AI market, focusing on interpretability and constitutional AI methods.
The reasons for Anthropic's removal from classified contracts remain unclear. Possible factors could include security protocols, performance evaluations, business arrangement negotiations, or strategic realignment of Pentagon priorities. Neither the DoD nor Anthropic has publicly detailed the decision rationale.
This restructuring reflects the Pentagon's aggressive push to integrate commercial AI systems into military operations. The approach allows the Defense Department to leverage cutting-edge civilian AI development while maintaining classified environments and security protocols.
The expanded partnership list suggests the Pentagon is pursuing vendor diversification—relying on multiple AI providers rather than consolidating with single vendors. This strategy reduces dependency risk and ensures access to varied AI capabilities and competing technologies.
The deals raise ongoing questions about data protection, foreign ownership, and national security implications in AI contracts. Each vendor operates under different corporate structures, including international parent companies, adding complexity to classified data handling requirements.
For the selected companies, Pentagon contracts represent significant validation and revenue opportunities. For Anthropic, the exclusion raises concerns about competitiveness despite the company's safety-focused positioning.
The Pentagon's classified AI partnerships will likely continue evolving as military AI requirements expand and technology capabilities advance. The current vendor roster reflects both technological capabilities and strategic considerations that will shape U.S. defense AI infrastructure for years ahead.
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