We appreciate you taking the time. You are Dario Amodei, the CEO of Anthropic. Is that right?
That's correct. Yeah.
Great. Well, my first question to you is: why won't you release Anthropic's AI without restrictions to the US government?
Yeah. So we should maybe back up a bit for a little bit of context. Anthropic has been the most lean-forward of all the AI companies in working with the US government and working with the US military. We were the first company to put our models on the classified cloud. We were the first company to make custom models for national security purposes. We're deployed across the intelligence community and the military for applications like cyber combat support operations, various things like this.
And the reason we've done this is I believe that we have to defend our country. I believe we have to defend our country from autocratic adversaries like China and like Russia. And so we've been very lean-forward. We have a substantial public sector team. But I have always believed that as we defend ourselves against our autocratic adversaries, we have to do so in ways that defend our democratic values and preserve our democratic values.
And so we have said to the Department of War that we are okay with 98 or 99% of the use cases they want to do, except for two that we're concerned about. One is domestic mass surveillance. There we're worried that things may become possible with AI that weren't possible before. An example of this is something like taking data collected by private firms, having it bought by the government, and analyzing it in mass via AI. That isn't illegal; it was just never useful before the era of AI. So there's this way in which domestic mass surveillance is getting ahead of the law. The technology is advancing so fast that it's out of step with the law. That's case number one.
Case number two is fully autonomous weapons. This is not the partially autonomous weapons that are used in Ukraine or could potentially be used in Taiwan today. This is the idea of making weapons that fire without any human involvement. Now, even those, I think that our adversaries may at some point have them. So perhaps they may at some point be needed for the defense of democracy. But we have some concerns about them.
First, the AI systems of today are nowhere near reliable enough to make fully autonomous weapons. Anyone who's worked with AI models understands that there's a basic unpredictability to them that, in a purely technical way, we have not solved. And there's an oversight question, too. If you have a large army of drones or robots that can operate without any human oversight, where there aren't human soldiers to make the decisions about who to target, who to shoot at, that presents concerns and we need to have a conversation about how that's overseen—and we haven't had that conversation yet. And so we feel strongly that those two use cases should not be allowed.
The Pentagon has told us that they have agreed in principle to these two restrictions and they wanted to strike a deal. Why couldn't an agreement be reached?
So, there were several stages of this, all done quickly and kind of all determined by the very limited 3-day window that they gave us, right? They gave us an ultimatum to agree to their terms in 3 days or be designated a supply chain risk or Defense Production Act—I guess we'll get to that later. But during that time there were a few back-and-forths. At one point they sent us language that appeared on the surface to meet our terms, but it had all kinds of language like "if the Pentagon deems it appropriate" or "to do anything in line with laws." So it didn't concede in any meaningful way.
And there were further steps of it that also did not concede in any meaningful way. We have wanted to strike a deal since the beginning. If you want to get a sense of the Pentagon's position on it, the Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell, the day before, reiterated their position in a tweet: "We only allow all lawful use." And this was the same as when they sent us their terms. So they have not in any way agreed to our exceptions in any meaningful way.
The President posted today in response to the situation: "Their selfishness," referring to Anthropic, "is putting American lives at risk, our troops in danger, and our national security in jeopardy." What do you think? What's your response?
So in the statement we issued yesterday and also in the one we issued today, we said that we were willing, even if the Department of War or the Trump administration takes these unprecedented measures against us—this kind of supply chain designation that's normally used against foreign adversaries—we have said that even if they take these extreme actions, we'll do everything we can to support the Department of War to provide its technology for as long as it takes to offboard us and onboard a competitor who's willing to do these things that we are not willing to do.
Prepared to exit.
Yeah. So we have offered continuity. We're deeply concerned about this. We're deeply concerned about the kind of interruption of service, which is exactly what's happening when we're designated a supply chain risk, right? When we're designated a supply chain risk, they say you have to be off all of our systems. And I've talked to people on the ground, uniformed military officers, who say this is essential. Not having this will set us back six months, 12 months, maybe longer. And so that's why we've tried so hard to get a deal. But again, the 3-day ultimatum, the threat to designate us a supply chain risk—the whole timeline has been driven by the Department of War, not by us. We are trying to provide continuity. We are trying to reach a deal here.
So then what does this mean for the safety of Americans?
Yeah. I would say a couple things. In the short run, it's up to the Department of War. We're still trying to reach a deal with them. We're still trying to talk to them.
Are they talking with you?
We've received various communications. We haven't seen anything that satisfies our concerns. But just in the broad sense, we are still interested in working with them as long as it is in line with our red lines.
But it sounds like you're still really far apart and now Secretary Hegseth has determined you all a supply chain risk and said what he's said. So, do you think it's possible at this point to come to an agreement?
Look, an agreement requires both sides. We, for our side, are willing to serve the national security of this country. We are willing to provide our models to all branches of the government, including the Department of War, the intelligence community, and the more civilian branches of the government under the terms that we've provided, under our red lines. We are always willing to do that. We don't take offense here. The reason we're providing our technology in this way is that we want to support the national security of the United States. We're not doing it for the sake of Pentagon officials. We're not doing it for the sake of a particular administration. We're doing it because it's good for the national security of the United States, and we're going to continue to do that.
Why do you think that it is better for Anthropic, a private company, to have more say in how AI is used in the military than the Pentagon itself?
So, first I would say—and I think this is an important point—no one on the ground has, to our knowledge, run into the limits of any of these exceptions. These are 1% of use cases and ones that we have seen no evidence on the ground have been done. Now, again, I can't say what their plans are that we don't know. But we have no evidence that these use cases have run into trouble. We've spread across the Department of War and other parts of the government without running into any of these problems.
Now, in terms of these one or two narrow exceptions, I agree that in the long run, we need to have a democratic conversation. In the long run, I do believe that it is Congress's job. If, for example, there are possibilities with domestic mass surveillance—government buying of bulk data that has been produced on Americans' locations, personal information, political affiliation to build profiles—it's now possible to analyze that with AI. The fact that's legal suggests the judicial interpretation of the Fourth Amendment has not caught up, or the laws passed by Congress have not caught up.
So in the long run, we think Congress should catch up with where the technology is going. But Congress is not the fastest-moving body in the world, and for right now, we are the ones who see this technology on the front line. I would have expected the Department of War to be thoughtful about these issues, to proactively think about them. And so I would have expected them not to have any concern and for us to have a conversation. But in the absence of that, we need to look at the technology, look at what it's capable of in terms of reliability, and look at the ways in which it's getting ahead of the law and escaping the intent of the law. Those are some very narrow areas, but I think that they're important. These are things that are fundamental to Americans, right? The right not to be spied on by the government. The right for our military officers to make decisions about war themselves and not turn it over completely to a machine. These are fundamental principles.
But in the name of fundamental principles, why should Americans trust you, the CEO of a private company, to make these decisions instead of the federal government?
Well, I would give two answers to that. One, we are a private company, right? We can choose to sell or not sell whatever we want. There are other providers. If the government doesn't like the services we provide or the way that we make them, they can use another contractor. This would have been the normal way to handle this, right? Just to say—I would have disagreed, but I would have respected them if they said—"We don't want to work with Anthropic. Our principles are not aligned with yours. We're going to go with one of the other models."
But they've both extended that to parts of the government beyond the military and tried to punitively revoke our contracts beyond the Department of War. And they've done this supply chain designation thing, which says that if you're another private company who has military contracts, you can't use Anthropic in a way that touches those military contracts. So they're reaching into the behavior of private enterprise. And it's very hard to interpret this in any way other than punitive. To our knowledge, the supply chain designation has never been applied to an American company. It has only been applied to adversaries like Kaspersky Labs, Chinese chip suppliers... being lumped in with them feels very punitive and inappropriate given the amount that we've done for US national security.
So you say you've done so much for US national security. You're adhering to these two restrictions that you want to keep. Do you think that Anthropic knows better than the Pentagon here?
We don't. Look, one of the things about a free market and free enterprise is different folks can provide different products under different principles. Remember, this isn't just about terms of use. This isn't just about what our model is legally allowed to do. Our model has a personality. It's capable of certain things. It's able to do certain things reliably. It's able to not do certain things reliably. And I think we are a good judge of what our models can do reliably and what they cannot. And I think we do have a good view into how the technology, again, is getting ahead of the law.
But I agree with you that this is not tenable in the long term. I don't think the right long-term solution is for a private company and the Pentagon to argue about this. I think Congress needs to act here, and we are thinking about that. We are thinking about what Congress could do to impose some of these guardrails that don't hinder our ability to defeat our adversaries, but that allow us to defeat our adversaries in a way that's in line with the values of our country. But as you know, Congress doesn't move fast. So I think in the meantime, we do need to draw a line in the sand.
So, until Congress acts, you're saying you are going to hold firm here. But there are so many other companies out there that do business with the US government. Boeing builds aircraft for the US military. Boeing doesn't tell the US military what to do with that aircraft. How is this any different?
Again, I would say two ways that it's different. One, I would point again to the newness of the technology. When a technology is well-established, there are lots of technical things about aircraft, but I think a general has a pretty good understanding of how an aircraft works—aircraft have been around for a long time.
But there's plenty of innovation inside the aerospace industry.
Sure, but not at the pace that we see with AI. AI is moving so fast. I've talked often about how AI is on an exponential trend—the amount of computation that goes into the models doubles every four months. We have never seen anything like this pace of innovation.
But if that pace continues, then the US government will never be caught up. So how does that logic apply if you have long argued that you want to work with the US government to provide the appropriate national security? If it's going to be such a fast development for the foreseeable future and Congress can't catch up, then why turn your back?
I think there's only catching up once, right? So the pace of the technology is fast, but the issues that arise are few but very important. Again, we only have two of these: domestic mass surveillance and fully autonomous weapons. We need to have a conversation with Congress to help them understand some of the risks associated with it. Again, this is the most American thing in the world. No one wants to be spied on by the US government.
At the exact same time, some of our greatest adversaries have technology that is either quickly catching up to us or will eventually do so—perhaps already has. And so if our military is critical to defending the American people and critical to our democracy, freedom, the republic, why stay in this position and say no, we're not going to cooperate?
Again, that's an abstract argument, but let's look at the actual two uses. Domestic mass surveillance does not help the US catch up with its adversaries. Domestic mass surveillance is an abuse of the government's authority even where it's technically legal. So that one we can rule out. Fully autonomous weapons—there I am concerned that we may need to keep up. It's just the technology is not ready.
And so we are not, as I said, categorically against fully autonomous weapons. We simply believe that the reliability is not there yet and that we need to have a conversation about oversight. We have offered to work with the Department of War to help develop these technologies, to prototype them in a sandbox, but they weren't interested in this unless they could do whatever they want from the beginning. And so again, we need to balance the existential need—no one has emphasized it more than me—to defeat our adversaries. But we need to fight in the right way.
This is like saying there are plenty of countries whose adversaries commit war crimes. Shouldn't we commit war crimes as well? I'm not saying this amounts to war crimes. What I'm saying is that the essence of our values is that we have to find a way to win in a way that preserves those values. We can't just be in a total race to the bottom. We have to have some principles, and these are very few. This technology can radically accelerate what our military can do. I've talked to admirals, I've talked to generals, I've talked to combatant commanders who say this has revolutionized what we can do. And these are just the very limited use cases we've deployed so far. So why harp on the 1% of use cases that are against our values?
We can pursue the 99% of use cases that advance our democratic values and that defend this country. And we can even try to study that last 1% of use cases to understand if there is a way to do them consistent with our values. That is our position and I think that's very reasonable.
Give me one or two examples of what could go wrong.
So there are two classes of things that I can imagine could go wrong. One, again, is around this idea of reliability, which is just it targets the wrong person. It shoots a civilian. It doesn't show the judgment that a human soldier would show—friendly fire, shooting a civilian, or just the wrong kind of things. We don't want to sell something that we don't think is reliable and we don't want to sell something that could get our own people killed or innocent people killed.
Second is this question of oversight. If you think about it, with human soldiers, there's a whole chain of accountability that assumes a human uses their common sense. Suppose I have an army of 10 million drones all coordinated by one person or a small set of people. I think it's easy to see that there are accountability issues there, right? That concentrating power that much doesn't work. It doesn't mean we shouldn't have this fleet. Again, I don't know—maybe we need it at some point because our adversaries will have it—but we need to have a conversation about accountability, about who is holding the button and who can say no. And I think that's very reasonable.
President Trump has called Anthropic a left-wing woke company. Is this decision at all driven by ideology?
I can't speak for what other parties are doing.
But you and here in Anthropic...
Yeah, look, we have tried to be very neutral. We speak up on issues of AI policy where we have expertise. We don't have views on general political issues and we try to work together whenever there's common ground.
For example, I went to an event in Pennsylvania with the President and Senator McCormick about provisioning enough energy to power our AI models in the US. I spoke to the President and expressed that I agreed with many aspects of what he's doing. We also did a pledge around using AI for health and we've done a number of other things. When the administration's AI Action Plan came out, we said that there were many—perhaps most—aspects of it that we agreed with. So this idea that we've somehow been partisan or that we haven't been evenhanded... we've been studiously evenhanded. And again, we can't control if someone, even the President, has an opinion about us. What's under our control is that we can be reasonable, we can be neutral, and we can stand up for what we believe.
1 to 10, will there be an agreement with the federal government on this in the future, or do you think this is over?
Look, I have no crystal ball. For our part, our position is clear. We have these two red lines. We've had them from day one. We are still advocating for those red lines. We're not going to move on them. If we can get to the point with the Department where we can see things the same way, then perhaps there could be an agreement. For our part and for the sake of US national security, we continue to want to make this work. But again, it takes two parties to have an agreement.
If you had a moment with the President right now tonight, what would you say to him?
I would say we are patriotic Americans. Everything we have done has been for the sake of this country, for the sake of supporting US national security. Our leaning forward in deploying our models with the military was done because we believe in this country. We believe in defeating our autocratic adversaries. We believe in defending America.
The red lines we have drawn, we drew because we believe that crossing them is contrary to American values and we wanted to stand up for American values. And when we were threatened with supply chain designation and the Defense Production Act—which are unprecedented intrusions into the private economy by the government—we exercised our classic First Amendment rights to speak up and disagree with the government. Disagreeing with the government is the most American thing in the world, and we are patriots in everything we have done here. We have stood up for the values of this country.
Do you think Anthropic can survive this as a business?
When the Secretary Hegseth tweeted out the supply chain designation, he said something that was inaccurate and that far exceeds their lawful authority. He said that any company that has a military contract can't do business with Anthropic at all. That is not what the law says. We put out a statement that pointed to the law. All the law says is that as part of its military contracts, any company cannot use Anthropic as part of those specific military contracts. That is a much more limited impact.
So you're confident that Anthropic can survive this?
Not only survive it, we're going to be fine. The impact of this designation is fairly small. Now, the nature of the tweet that the Secretary put out was designed to create uncertainty, to create a situation where people believed the impact would be much larger—it was designed to create fear, uncertainty, and doubt—but we won't let that succeed. We will be fine.
Critics call this an abuse of power—what the Pentagon is doing and what the White House is doing. Do you believe this is an abuse of power?
Again, I would return to the idea that this is unprecedented.
But is it an abuse of power?
This has never happened before. This designation has never happened before with an American company. And I think it was made very clear in some of their statements and language that this was retaliatory and punitive. I don't know what else to call it: retaliatory and punitive.
So, will you take legal action?
As I've stated in our statement, all we've received is a tweet. We haven't received an actual supply chain designation. There's been no actual action by the government. There have just been tweets saying what they claim they're going to do.
You haven't received any formal information?
We haven't received any formal information whatsoever. All we've seen are tweets from the President and tweets from Secretary Hegseth. When we receive some kind of formal action, we will look at it, we will understand it, and we will challenge it in court.
What do you think that says about their ability to navigate major national security issues if this is the way that you say they're communicating with you?
Again, I don't want to make this about this particular administration. I don't want to make this about particular people. We are trying to do whatever we can to support US national security. That's why we're committed to trying to find a deal. If we can't find a deal, that is why we're committed to offboarding in a smooth way that allows our war fighters to continue to be supported as they go into conflicts. And that's why we're committed to standing up to actions that we think are not in line with the values of this country. It's not about any particular person or administration. It's about the principle of standing up for what's right.
Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic. Thank you very much.
Thank you so much for having me.