Judge blocks Pentagon order branding Anthropic a national security risk - The Washington Post
Quick Insights
The Bottom Line
Federal judge blocked Pentagon's order designating AI firm Anthropic a national security supply-chain risk, preventing operational restrictions.
AI Summary
A federal judge has blocked a Pentagon order that designated Anthropic, an artificial intelligence company, as a national security risk. The order had classified Anthropic in a way that would have restricted its access to federal contracts and potentially hampered its business operations. The ruling represents a legal setback for the Pentagon's effort to control which AI firms can work with the Defense Department on sensitive projects. Anthropic, founded by former OpenAI researchers, has become a major player in the competitive AI sector and counts government agencies among its potential clients. The decision could influence how federal agencies approach vetting and restricting AI companies on national security grounds.
What's Being Done
A federal judge blocked the Pentagon's designation of Anthropic as a national security supply-chain risk.
Source Coverage Map
11 of 43 tracked sources covered this story
Following this story?
Get notified when new coverage appears
Other Sources Covering This Story
5 sourcesMultiple outlets have reported on this story. Compare perspectives from different sources.
This article is part of a story we're tracking:
Should this be getting more attention?
You Might Have Missed
Related stories from different sources and perspectives
National SecurityJudge questions Pentagon's "troubling" Anthropic actions
<p>A federal judge on Tuesday called the Pentagon's treatment of Anthropic "troubling" as the AI company urged the court to pause the Trump administration's designation of the company as a <a href="https://www.axios.com/2026/03/09/anthropic-sues-pentagon-supply-chain-risk-label" target="_blank">supply chain risk</a>.</p><p><strong>Why it matters: </strong>The Trump administration is <a href="https://www.axios.com/2026/02/27/anthropic-pentagon-supply-chain-risk-claude" target="_blank">looking</a> to remove Claude from government agencies and prevent companies that do business with the Pentagon from<strong> </strong>working with the AI lab. </p><hr><ul><li>Agencies have <a href="https://www.axios.com/2026/03/02/treasury-trump-ai-anthropic-pentagon" target="_blank">started</a> to do so, and Anthropic says some companies are rethinking contracts.</li></ul><p><strong>What they're saying: </strong>"I don't know if it's murder, but it looks like an attempt to cripple Anthropic," said U.S. ...
National SecurityAnthropic challenges US Pentagon’s ban in San Francisco court showdown
Anthropic accuses Pentagon of unlawful retaliation over its refusal to loosen AI safety restrictions for military use.
Civil Rights“Flagrant Violation”: Judge Orders Return of Mother Deported Despite DACA
On Monday, a federal judge in California ordered the Trump administration to facilitate the return to the United States of a Sacramento mother who was detained at her February green card interview and deported to Mexico within 24 hours. Maria de Jesus Estrada Juarez had active protection from deportation under the Deferred Action for Childhood […]
Government TransparencyPentagon will remove media offices after judge reinstates NYT's press credentials
The U.S. Defense Department will remove media offices from the Pentagon after a federal judge sided with The New York Times in a lawsuit challenging limits on reporters' access to the building, a department official announced Monday.
CorporateJudge denies NCAA temporary restraining order blocking DraftKings from using ‘March Madness’
A federal judge on Thursday denied the NCAA’s bid for a temporary restraining order to prevent DraftKings from using “March Madness” and other language to promote sports bets on its service. Judge Tanya Walton Pratt ruled that the NCAA did not show how DraftKings would cause irreparable harm by using terms such as “March Madness,”…
National SecurityJudge says government's Anthropic ban looks like punishment
Tech company Anthropic, the maker of the Claude AI system, is suing the Trump administration over the government labeling it a "supply chain risk."

US uses hundreds of Tomahawk missiles on Iran, alarming some at Pentagon, WaPo reports - Reuters
<a href="https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMi1AFBVV95cUxQaWlEeG1iQ3BYdWtGQXlGT09ieHV5cTJic05XT3pHaWpHOWtFVTBhd3I0d0o2WlhlaUZpb3RCMXVhdi1RNXRUdkpuMjU4LWJOd3NISWlnRy1aMFVCTFNGNHZ3UUljQ1RYYXdrcTl1MkJ1aDJKdE9NUHBJUWtZZVNHRmJhMmtMMV9nR1FCZ3FsN09OOE01NDBHdUVLMjNZXzNZSGNkdmo3dmVua2M5dHV4b2l2MlRDSFJFTTlMbEpOZkZ4QVl0a0FWd0VnMDRKeVBwWVd2SA?oc=5" target="_blank">US uses hundreds of Tomahawk missiles on Iran, alarming some at Pentagon, WaPo reports</a> <font color="#6f6f6f">Reuters</font>
Did this story change how you see things?
Stories like this only matter when people see them. Help us get verified journalism in front of more eyes.
The Verity Ledger curates verified investigative journalism from trusted sources only.
See our sourcesMost Read This Week
Fentanyl found inside Barbies sold at Missouri discount store, police say

Senate deal reached to cap insulin costs

The West's historic snow drought could bring water shortages, wildfires

Washington ignores America's fiscal cliff

Iran built a vast camera network to control dissent. Israel used it to track targets, AP sources say





