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Anthropic Trump clash: How a defiant AI startup is battling Washington’s new rules
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Anthropic Trump clash: How a defiant AI startup is battling Washington’s new rules

Photography & Words by Tariq Al-Fayed June 30, 2026 2 MIN READ
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Anthropic Trump clash escalates in Washington

On Friday OpenAI paused the rollout of GPT-5.6 after a request from the U.S. government, while the Commerce Department announced a ↑ relaxation of export restrictions on Anthropic’s Mythos model that had been suspended for two weeks.

Supply‑chain risk label fuels a new showdown

Anthropic, valued at ↑ $965 billion, saw the Pentagon brand its technology a “supply chain risk” in April when the firm rejected contract language demanding unfettered military use. Two weeks later the same agency imposed export controls on Mythos and the commercial‑grade Fable after a jailbreak demonstrated potential cyber‑capability leaks.

Trump’s rhetoric has been relentless. The president called the company “left‑wing nut jobs” on X, while undersecretary Emil Michael labeled CEO Dario Amodei a “liar with a God‑complex.” Defense secretary Pete Hegseth called him an “ideological lunatic” in a congressional hearing.

“When we disagree with the White House, we’ll say so,” Amodei told Fortune in October.

Unlike rivals that have courted the administration—Meta’s Zuckerberg donated $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund and hired former deputy national security adviser Dina Powell McCormick—Anthropic has stayed on principle, refusing to embed explicit clauses that would let the military weaponize its models.

That stance earned praise from AI researchers but also triggered a wave of political attacks. Reuters reported that senior officials tried to portray Amodei as aloof, even as Anthropic claims the CEO responded to White House outreach within ninety minutes.

In a bid to ease tensions, Anthropic recently deployed a technical team—including cybersecurity lead Nicholas Carlini and safeguards chief Dave Orr—to Washington to craft a risk‑assessment framework for the Fable jailbreak. Simultaneously, former Trump NSC staffer Sarah Heck and co‑founder Tom Brown have taken over high‑level talks.

While the export ban on Mythos has been lifted, the Fable restrictions remain, threatening a revenue stream the company counted on for its upcoming IPO. As Bloomberg notes, the clash illustrates that technical correctness does not automatically translate into political capital in Trump’s Washington.


Dispatch from Tariq Al-Fayed (Middle East Geopolitical Strategist).

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