Federal Judge Blocks Pentagon’s Anthropic Blacklist — Court Overrules Supply-Chain Designation

A federal judge in California has blocked the U.S. government’s effort to blacklist Anthropic from classified Pentagon AI work. The order halts the Defense Department’s “supply-chain risk” designation, restoring Anthropic’s eligibility while the legal fight over the ethics of AI usage in war plays out.

The Ruling

  • Federal court grants emergency relief to Anthropic
  • Pentagon’s supply-chain-risk designation is halted pending litigation
  • Anthropic restored to eligible-vendor status (de-facto)
  • Underlying case: Anthropic vs. Trump administration over AI war-use ethics

What’s At Stake

  • Anthropic’s access to multi-billion-dollar classified DoD AI contracts
  • Precedent for whether commercial AI labs can refuse certain government uses
  • The legal definition of “supply-chain risk” in the AI context
  • The boundary between corporate ethical preferences and procurement-eligibility

The Wider Picture

  • Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has reportedly visited the White House since the original designation
  • Anthropic recently unveiled Mythos — a tool that identifies cybersecurity threats — and has been actively cooperative on national-security adjacent work
  • The Pentagon’s eight-vendor classified deal (announced 1 May) had conspicuously excluded Anthropic
  • Today’s ruling reshuffles the post-deal competitive landscape

What Comes Next

  • Pentagon expected to appeal — or to issue revised designation criteria
  • Other AI labs watching the precedent closely (xAI, Reflection AI all could be affected)
  • Congressional Armed Services Committees may schedule hearings
  • Anthropic’s posture on classified work likely to be reviewed publicly

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