xAI’s Grok gains Pentagon approval for classified military systems
Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence firm xAI has signed an agreement with the U.S. Department of Defense allowing its AI model Grok to be used in classified military systems, a defense official confirmed, News.Az reports, citing Axios.
Up to now, Anthropic's Claude has been the only model available in the systems on which the military's most sensitive intelligence work, weapons development and battlefield operations take place. But the Pentagon is threatening Anthropic in a dispute over safeguards and may soon need a replacement.
Anthropic has refused the Pentagon's demand that they make Claude available for "all lawful purposes," insisting in particular on blocking its use for the mass surveillance of Americans and the development of fully autonomous weapons.
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xAI agreed to that "all lawful use" standard, as Axios previously reported. The New York Times (NYT) first reported that a deal had been signed.
It's not clear whether xAI will be able to fully replace Anthropic, or how long that process would take. Claude was used in the Maduro raid, for example, through Anthropic's partnership with Palantir.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth will host Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei for what sources expect to be a tense meeting at the Pentagon on Tuesday.
A Defense official said Hegseth would effectively be presenting Amodei with an ultimatum. The Pentagon is threatening to brand Anthropic a "supply chain risk," among other potential penalties, if it won't agree to lift all safeguards.
Defense officials admit that offloading and replacing Claude would be a very difficult process.
Grok, Google's Gemini and OpenAI's ChatGPT are all available in the military's unclassified systems, and Google and OpenAI have also been in talks to move over into the classified space.
The Pentagon has moved to speed up those negotiations as it prepares to potentially sever its relationship with Anthropic.
One source said the Pentagon had "reached out to OpenAI to reignite talks with a new sense of urgency," though the parties were still "not close to getting a deal" due to the complex issues at play. A second source confirmed the Pentagon's outreach had been accelerating.
The NYT reported that Google was "close" to a deal to allow classified use of Gemini, while OpenAI was "not close."
The Defense official disputed the characterization of Google as much closer than OpenAI to a deal, saying talks were ongoing with both and the department believes both will sign agreements.
However, administration officials insist both Google and OpenAI will have to agree to the "all lawful purposes" criteria.
One of the sources said it was not clear if OpenAI would agree to that standard.
By Nijat Babayev





