Anthropic Talking to the Trump Administration About Its Next AI Model, Co-Founder Says

WASHINGTON, April 13 (Reuters) – Anthropic is discussing ⁠its ⁠frontier AI model Mythos ⁠with the Trump administration, the firm’s co-founder said on ​Monday, even after the Pentagon cut off business with the U.S. AI ‌company following a contract dispute.

A ‌dispute between Anthropic and the Pentagon over guardrails for how ⁠the military ⁠could use its artificial intelligence tools led the agency to ​label Anthropic a supply-chain risk last month, barring its use by the Pentagon and its contractors.

“We have a narrow contracting dispute, but I don’t ​want that to get in the way of the fact that ⁠we care ⁠deeply about national security,” ⁠Anthropic ​Co-founder Jack Clark said at the Semafor World Economy event in Washington.

“Our ​position is the ⁠government has to know about this stuff … So absolutely, we’re talking to them about Mythos, and we’ll talk to them about the next models as well.”

The nature and details of Anthropic’s talks with the ⁠U.S. government, including which agencies are involved, were not immediately clear.

Mythos, ⁠announced on April 7, is Anthropic’s “most capable yet for coding and agentic tasks https://www.reuters.com/legal/litigation/ai-boosted-hacks-with-anthropics-mythos-could-have-dire-consequences-banks-2026-04-13/,” the company said in a blog post, referring to the model’s ability to act autonomously.

Its capabilities to code at a high level have given it a potentially unprecedented ability to identify cybersecurity vulnerabilities and devise ways to exploit them, experts said nL6N40W126.

A Washington, D.C., federal appeals court ⁠last week declined to block https://www.reuters.com/world/us-court-declines-block-pentagons-anthropic-blacklisting-now-2026-04-08/ the Pentagon’s national security blacklisting of Anthropic for now, a win for the Trump administration that comes after another appeals court came to the ​opposite conclusion in a separate legal challenge by Anthropic.

(Reporting ​by Alexandra AlperEditing by Rod Nickel)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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